Text Analyzer

Analyze your text for readability, sentiment, and linguistic features. Get detailed insights to improve your writing and understand your content better.

Try these examples to test different features:

💡Writing Tips

For Better Readability:

  • â€ĸ Keep sentences under 20 words
  • â€ĸ Use simple, common words
  • â€ĸ Break long paragraphs into shorter ones
  • â€ĸ Aim for a Flesch-Kincaid score above 60

For Better Engagement:

  • â€ĸ Vary sentence structure
  • â€ĸ Use active voice
  • â€ĸ Include transition words
  • â€ĸ Balance positive and negative sentiment
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About this Text Analyzer

Analyze your text for readability, sentiment, and linguistic features with comprehensive insights. Our text analyzer provides detailed statistics including word count, character count, sentence analysis, readability scores (Flesch-Kincaid, Gunning Fog, Coleman-Liau), sentiment analysis, and word frequency. Perfect for writers, content creators, students, and professionals who want to understand their writing better, improve readability, analyze sentiment, or optimize content for specific audiences.

Key Features

Comprehensive text statistics (words, characters, sentences, paragraphs)

Readability analysis with multiple scoring algorithms

Sentiment analysis (positive, negative, neutral)

Word frequency analysis and keyword extraction

Average word, sentence, and paragraph length calculations

Real-time analysis as you type

Copy analysis summary to clipboard

Works entirely in your browser for privacy

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How to Use

1

Paste or type your text into the input field

2

Click 'Analyze Text' to process your content

3

Review basic statistics (words, characters, sentences)

4

Check readability scores and grade levels

5

View sentiment analysis results

6

Review most frequent words

7

Use insights to improve your writing

8

Copy the analysis summary if needed

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Popular Use Cases

1

Improve content readability for target audiences

2

Analyze sentiment in customer feedback or reviews

3

Optimize content for SEO and engagement

4

Check writing quality and complexity

5

Analyze competitor content and writing style

6

Track writing improvements over time

7

Ensure content meets readability requirements

8

Understand linguistic features of your writing

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Tips & Best Practices

Aim for Flesch-Kincaid scores above 60 for general audiences

Shorter sentences improve readability scores

Use sentiment analysis to balance positive and negative content

Word frequency helps identify key themes and topics

Lower grade levels indicate easier-to-read content

Vary sentence length for better engagement

Review readability scores to match your target audience

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Frequently Asked Questions

Q

What is the Flesch-Kincaid score?

The Flesch-Kincaid score measures readability on a scale of 0-100. Higher scores indicate easier-to-read text. Scores above 60 are considered easily readable for general audiences.

Q

How accurate is sentiment analysis?

Sentiment analysis uses word-based detection. It's useful for general sentiment but may not capture context or sarcasm. For critical applications, human review is recommended.

Q

What do readability scores mean?

Readability scores indicate the education level needed to understand the text. Lower scores mean easier reading. For example, a score of 60-70 is readable by 13-15 year olds.

Q

Can I analyze code or technical content?

Yes, the tool analyzes any text. However, readability scores are designed for natural language and may not be as meaningful for code or highly technical terminology.