5 Writing Habits That Make You Sound Like ChatGPT

Key Takeaways

- Certain words like 'delve,' 'pivotal,' and 'tapestry' have become AI tells that trigger detection tools
- Listing everything in threes is a ChatGPT signature pattern that makes human writing look artificial
- AI detectors analyze structure and word patterns, not just vocabulary, so varied sentence lengths matter
You wrote something yourself. No AI assistance. Then someone flags it as ChatGPT-generated. It stings.
AI writing detectors aren't infallible. But there's another possibility worth considering: your writing actually sounds like ChatGPT. Not because you cheated, but because you've absorbed the same patterns from reading so much AI-generated content online.
As MakeUseOf writer Abhijith N Arjunan points out, AI content detectors work by analyzing structure and writing patterns. If your natural style happens to match ChatGPT's conventions, you'll trip the same alarms.
1. You're Using Known AI Tell Words
Researchers now track specific vocabulary by model era. During GPT-4's peak, you couldn't escape words like "tapestry," "delve," "pivotal," "underscore," and "vibrant." Later models shifted to "fostering," "highlighting," and "enhancing."
The words change, but detectors and human readers have learned to spot them. Even if "delve" was your favorite verb before ChatGPT existed, you might want to find alternatives. At minimum, stop overusing them.

2. Everything Gets Listed in Threes
The rule of three is a classic rhetorical device. It's also a ChatGPT signature.
AI chatbots love presenting information in three-component structures. Three benefits. Three examples. Three reasons. The pattern feels intentional and polished until you notice it never stops. Every single point comes in a triplet.
Human writers vary their lists. Sometimes you have two points. Sometimes five. Sometimes one strong example beats three weak ones. If every paragraph you write follows the magic three formula, detectors notice.
3. Your Sentence Structure Never Varies
ChatGPT tends toward predictable sentence lengths and structures. Subject-verb-object. Transition word. Another subject-verb-object. The rhythm becomes mechanical.
Real human writing is messier. Short punchy sentences. Then a longer one that winds around a bit before landing. Maybe a fragment for emphasis. The variation creates a fingerprint that's hard for AI to replicate.
4. You Open With Generic Hooks
"In today's fast-paced world..." Stop. That's ChatGPT talking.
AI loves broad, safe openings that could apply to almost any topic. "In the ever-evolving landscape of..." "As technology continues to advance..." These phrases signal nothing except that you couldn't think of something specific to say.
Good openings are concrete. A specific fact. A surprising detail. A direct statement of what you're about to argue. Anything but the throat-clearing that ChatGPT defaults to.
5. You Summarize Before You've Earned It
ChatGPT compulsively summarizes. It tells you what it's going to tell you. Then it tells you. Then it tells you what it told you. The structure is tidy but exhausting.
Human writers trust readers more. We make a point and move on. We don't need to announce "In conclusion" before our final paragraph. We don't need to recap every section before starting the next one.
Logicity's Take
How to Sound More Human
Breaking these habits takes conscious effort. Start by reading your drafts aloud. Robotic patterns become obvious when you hear them.
- Vary your sentence lengths intentionally
- Use specific details instead of generic descriptions
- Skip the summary at the end unless you're writing a research paper
- Check for those AI tell words and swap them for simpler alternatives
- Let your lists have two items. Or four. Or seven.
The goal isn't to trick detectors. It's to write in a way that sounds like you, not like a statistical average of internet text.
Related security concern for professionals managing digital communications
Frequently Asked Questions
Can AI detectors actually tell if something was written by ChatGPT?
Not reliably. AI detectors analyze patterns and probability, not definitive markers. They produce false positives on human writing and miss AI content that's been edited. They're one signal, not proof.
Will these writing habits definitely get my work flagged?
Not always. Detection depends on multiple factors. But these patterns increase the likelihood, especially when several appear together in the same piece.
Should I stop using ChatGPT for writing entirely?
That's a personal and professional judgment. The article focuses on unconscious habits, not AI tool usage. If you use AI assistance, editing the output to sound like your voice matters more than avoiding the tool.
Are some AI tell words actually fine to use?
Yes. Words like 'enhance' or 'highlight' aren't inherently bad. The problem is overuse and clustering. One 'pivotal' in a 2,000-word piece is fine. Five of them raises flags.
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Source: MakeUseOf
Manaal Khan
Tech & Innovation Writer
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