Paraphrase

Free Paraphrasing Tool

Reword anything — essays, emails, posts — in six distinct styles.

Style Same meaning, fresh wording.
Your text 0 words · 0/6000 Full-screen editor
Result

Your result will appear here.

Tip: press +Enter to run.

A paraphrasing tool rewrites text using different words and sentence structures while keeping the original meaning — useful for clarity, tone changes, and avoiding repetition.

How to use the paraphraser

  1. 1
    Paste your text. Add the sentence or paragraph to reword.
  2. 2
    Choose a style. Standard, Formal, Casual, Creative, Shorter, or Expand.
  3. 3
    Click Paraphrase. Get a fresh rewrite that keeps your meaning.
  4. 4
    Copy the result. Use it in your essay, email, or post.

What is a paraphrasing tool?

A paraphrasing tool rewords text so it expresses the same idea with different vocabulary and sentence structure. Humanit’s paraphraser keeps every fact, number, and quotation intact while changing the wording — handy for tightening a sentence, shifting register, or simply saying something a fresh way. Unlike a thesaurus, it rewrites whole sentences, not just single words.

How paraphrasing tools work

Modern paraphrasers use language models to understand a sentence’s meaning, then re-express it: substituting vocabulary, reordering clauses, splitting or combining sentences, and adjusting tone. A good paraphraser changes the surface form while preserving the underlying meaning — which is exactly what separates real paraphrasing from word-swapping that reads awkwardly.

Six paraphrasing styles

Standard keeps the same length and tone with new wording. Formal raises the register and drops contractions. Casual relaxes it into conversational language. Creative reaches for vivid verbs and fresh rhythm. Shorter trims 30–50% of the length. Expand adds clarifying detail. Every style is free with no sign-up — most competitors gate the interesting modes behind a paywall.

Paraphrasing vs summarizing

Paraphrasing keeps roughly the same length and all the ideas, just in new words. Summarizing shortens text and keeps only the key points. If you want the same content reworded, paraphrase; if you want the gist in fewer words, use the summarizer instead.

Is using a paraphrasing tool cheating?

Paraphrasing a source into your own words is a normal, legitimate writing skill — but it does not remove the need to cite. Passing off a paraphrased source as your own idea without attribution is still plagiarism. Use the tool to improve your own phrasing, and always credit the original author and follow your institution’s rules.

How to cite paraphrased text

A paraphrase still needs a citation. In APA and MLA, name the author and year (and ideally a page number) even though you’ve changed the wording, because the idea isn’t yours. Paraphrasing changes how you say something; citation credits whose idea it was.

The six paraphrasing styles and when to use each
StyleWhat it doesBest for
StandardSame length & tone, new wordingA quick, faithful reword
FormalRaises register, drops contractionsAcademic & professional writing
CasualRelaxed, conversational languageBlogs, social, friendly emails
CreativeVivid verbs, fresh rhythmMarketing & storytelling
ShorterTrims 30–50% of the lengthTightening wordy text
ExpandAdds clarifying detailFleshing out thin drafts

Who it's for

Students Reword research notes into your own clear sentences (then cite the source).
Researchers Rephrase dense passages for a different audience.
Professionals Adjust the tone of emails, reports, and proposals.
Bloggers & marketers Refresh copy and avoid repeating the same phrasing.

Frequently asked questions

What does paraphrasing mean?

Paraphrasing means restating a piece of text in different words and sentence structures while keeping the same meaning. It’s how you express someone else’s idea — or your own — in a fresh way.

What does the paraphrasing tool do?

It rewrites your text with different vocabulary and sentence structures while preserving the original meaning, in your choice of six styles.

Is the paraphrasing tool free?

Yes — free rewrites every day, no account needed to try it, and all six styles are free (no premium-only modes).

What’s the difference between paraphrasing and summarizing?

Paraphrasing keeps the same length and all the ideas in new words; summarizing shortens the text to just the key points. Use the summarizer if your goal is brevity.

Will paraphrasing change my meaning?

No. Humanit preserves your facts, numbers, names, and quotations and never adds new claims — only the phrasing changes.

Is using a paraphrasing tool considered cheating?

Rewording is a legitimate skill, but it doesn’t replace citation. Paraphrasing a source without crediting it is still plagiarism, so always cite and follow your institution’s rules on tool use.

How do you cite paraphrased text?

Cite the original author and year (and a page number where possible) in your style guide’s format — APA, MLA, or Chicago. Changing the words doesn’t change whose idea it is.

Can it make sentences shorter or longer?

Yes. Use the Shorter mode to trim 30–50% of the length, or Expand to add clarifying detail and examples.

Is it different from the humanizer?

Yes. The paraphraser is for clarity and tone; the humanizer rewrites to make AI text read as human and reduce detector signals. Use whichever fits your goal.

Last updated: May 2026