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About AI-generated text
This paragraph is produced by a large language model. AI-generated text is recognizable by AI-detection tools, plagiarism checkers, and academic-integrity systems, regardless of how it was paraphrased afterwards.
Use the output as a draft starting point: edit it in the box, swap in your own specifics, and run it through a human review pass before publishing.
Recent generations
How it works
The Paragraph Generator produces a single paragraph that fits a specific structural template (Blog Introduction, PEEL Body, Blog Conclusion, Product Description, About Section, Summary, Comparison, Transition, or Generic). The structure is baked into the prompt so the first draft typically lands in the right shape rather than producing a generic blob that needs structural editing afterwards.
Three input modes (genuinely server-differentiated, not just cosmetic):
- Topic, you describe what the paragraph should be about. The model writes from scratch about that topic.
- Outline, you paste bullet points the paragraph should cover. The model weaves them into flowing prose rather than spitting out a bulleted list.
- Continuation, you paste the previous paragraph; the model writes the next one that flows naturally from where it ended, NOT a rewrite or summary. The killer mode for unblocking writers mid-post.
Structure presets each carry a min/max word range, a structural template (e.g. PEEL = Point + Evidence + Explanation + Link), and a prompt hint. The result card surfaces a green/amber/red word-count pill so you can see if the paragraph fits the structure's sweet-spot range.
Tones, 15 of them, change voice and word choice (Standard, Formal, Casual, Concise, Expanded, Confident, Friendly, Persuasive, Witty, Empathetic, Bold, Academic, Storytelling, Urgent, Inspirational). Each tone shifts structure as well as vocabulary.
Honest framing. AI-generated text is detectable by AI checkers, plagiarism systems, and academic-integrity tools. Use the output as a starting point: edit it in the card, add your own specifics, run human review before publishing.
Plan caps. Each call consumes a portion of your shared daily AI token budget. Free 50/day; Bronze 100; Silver 200; Gold 400; Platinum 1,000. The budget is shared across every AI tool on this site.
What you will see
- Mode toggle (Topic / Outline / Continuation)
- Switches the input semantics, NOT just the label. The model is told whether you sent it a topic, a bulleted outline, or the previous paragraph, and that changes the prompt strategy.
- Paragraph structure
- Grouped by family (Blog, Marketing, Generic, Transition). Each preset has a structural label (e.g. "Point, Evidence, Explanation, Link" on PEEL) that surfaces as a tinted badge on the result card.
- Focus keyword
- An optional phrase the paragraph should include. The live preview under the input also runs a Keywords Everywhere lookup so you can see monthly volume / CPC / competition before submitting.
- Tone
- One of 15 styles. Each tone shifts both word choice AND sentence structure.
- Paragraph card
- The single generated paragraph in an editable textarea, with structure-label badge, word count, character count, Flesch reading-ease score, Keyword-present pill, Copy button, and Regenerate button.
- Word-count pill
- Green when the paragraph fits the structure's sweet-spot range, amber when it's within 20% over/under, red when it's far out. Updates live as you edit.
- Recent generations
- The last 10 submissions, kept locally for 30 days.
Frequently asked questions
How do I generate a paragraph with this tool?
Pick a mode (Topic, Outline, or Continuation), drop your text into the input box (a brief, a bulleted outline, or the previous paragraph respectively), pick a paragraph structure preset from the dropdown (Blog Introduction, PEEL Body, Blog Conclusion, Product Description, About Section, Summary, Comparison, Transition, or Generic), pick a tone, optionally add a focus keyword, and click Generate paragraph. You get a single paragraph in the structure you picked. Hit Regenerate on the card to re-roll the angle without resubmitting.
What are the 5 steps to writing a paragraph?
- Decide the one point. A good paragraph makes one main claim. If it makes two, it should be two paragraphs.
- Open with a topic sentence. Tell the reader what the paragraph is about.
- Support with evidence. Examples, data, reasoning, quotes, whatever makes the point land.
- Explain or elaborate. Why does the evidence matter for the claim?
- Link back or transition. Either tie the point back to the main argument, or set up the next paragraph.
This is the PEEL structure (Point, Evidence, Explanation, Link), which is built in as a preset option in this tool.
What is a body paragraph example?
The PEEL preset produces body paragraphs that follow Point + Evidence + Explanation + Link, the structure most academic and editorial writers use. An example output: "Bamboo toothbrushes are a meaningful step toward reducing plastic waste. The average plastic toothbrush takes about 400 years to decompose, and over 1 billion are discarded in the United States alone each year. Switching to bamboo, which is biodegradable, removes a tiny but recurring source of plastic from a household's footprint. For shoppers building an eco-conscious routine, it is one of the lowest-friction swaps available." Point, evidence, explanation, link, in one paragraph.
How do I start a paragraph in an essay?
Open with the topic sentence: a single direct claim that this paragraph will argue for. Avoid throat-clearing phrases ("It is important to note that...", "In this essay we will discuss..."), they delay the actual content and weaken the opening. If you have a draft, paste it into Continuation mode and let the tool write the next paragraph; it sees how the previous paragraph ended and matches the flow. For an opening introduction paragraph specifically, use the Blog Introduction preset, which is structured around hook + thesis + preview.
Is a paragraph 3 or 4 sentences?
There is no fixed rule; good paragraphs run anywhere from one sentence (for emphasis) to ten or more (for technical or academic writing). The right length depends on the structure preset: a Transition paragraph is intentionally short (30-80 words); a PEEL body paragraph is medium (100-180 words); a Comparison paragraph is longer (100-180+ words). Each preset has its own min/max word range baked in, and the model is asked to fit. The result card shows the actual word count so you can verify.
What does Continuation mode do?
You paste the paragraph that comes before the one you want to generate, and the AI writes the next paragraph that flows naturally from where the existing text ended. The prompt is explicit: do not summarize or rewrite the previous paragraph, write what comes next. This is the killer mode for blog writers stuck mid-post: paste the last paragraph you wrote, get the next one, edit it into your voice, repeat. None of the major free competitors offer this.
What is PEEL writing?
PEEL stands for Point, Evidence, Explanation, Link. A PEEL paragraph opens with the point you're arguing, supports it with concrete evidence (data, examples, citations, reasoning), explains why that evidence supports the point, and links back to the main argument or forward to the next paragraph. It is the most-taught body-paragraph structure in academic writing because it forces the writer to justify each claim rather than asserting it. Pick the PEEL Body Paragraph preset to get this structure automatically.
How much can I generate per day?
Each call consumes a portion of your shared daily AI token budget; the quota chip on the page shows your real-time remaining count. The daily token budget is shared across every AI tool on this site (Sentence Rewriter, AI Text Generator, Summarizer, Grammar Checker, Hook Generator, and more). Free: 50 tokens/day. Bronze: 100. Silver: 200. Gold: 400. Platinum: 1,000. Regenerate consumes from the same bucket, so polishing a paragraph two or three times still leaves room for the next submission.