Apply Styles
Audience & Accessibility Styles:
Beginner-Friendly: Write for people just starting out. Use simple ideas, plain words, step-by-step instructions, and avoid confusing jargon.
Expert-Level: Write for people who already know a lot about the topic. Use technical words, complex ideas, and detailed analysis—don't explain basic stuff.
Child-Appropriate: Write for kids. Use age-appropriate ideas, short simple sentences, fun and imaginative language, and keep the tone engaging and playful.
Teen-Appropriate: Write for teenagers. Use examples they care about, make it relatable to their lives, keep the energy engaging, but treat them with respect by not oversimplifying.
General Public: Write so anyone can understand it, no matter their background. Use common interests, everyday language, and include everyone in the conversation.
Professional Audience: Write for people in a specific field or job. Use the technical language they know, be accurate and precise, and get to the point efficiently—they speak the same professional language as you.
Academic Audience: Write like a scholarly paper. Include citations and sources, use formal writing style, provide strong evidence, and refer to theories and research frameworks.
Non-Native English: Write for people learning English or for whom English isn't their first language. Use simple sentence structure, clear explanations, common everyday vocabulary, and show patience in your tone.
Accessibility-Focused: Write in a way that works for people with different abilities. Use clear formatting, describe images in detail, organize information logically, and write in a way that's easy to follow.
Multilingual: Write content that can work across different languages and cultures. Use universal ideas, examples that aren't tied to one culture, phrases that translate easily, and keep the structure simple.
