TG Productive Web Apps
Writing Tool

Online Notepad with Grammar
Check and Proofread.

Use one plain writing space for notes, drafts, and edits, then run grammar and proofread checks only when you are ready.

No registration Fast browser workflow Direct results

Write comfortably, then clean up the wording in the same notepad.

This notepad keeps drafting and cleanup together, so you can write first and fix grammar, spelling, or rough phrasing afterward.

Notepad with Grammar Check

Write in the lined editor, keep your structure, apply grammar or proofread changes without leaving the page.

Run grammar check to mark issues inline, then click an underlined word or phrase to review suggestions.
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What this notepad is best used for

This page combines drafting and cleanup so you can keep your notes, article sections, or rough copy in one place. You do not need to move the text into a second tool just to check grammar or tidy the wording.

It works especially well when you want a plain writing space first and polishing tools only after the ideas are already on the page.

Using the notepad and grammar tools

  1. Write or paste your text into the lined note area.
  2. Use the grammar check when you want to catch mistakes or awkward phrases.
  3. Run proofreading when you want a cleaner version of the same writing.
  4. Copy, keep editing, or save the result once the draft feels right.

Keep drafting and correction in separate moments

Writing usually slows down when every sentence is judged before the idea is finished. The lined notepad is most useful when you let the first pass remain rough: capture the point, follow the thought, and postpone small corrections. Once the draft exists, grammar checking becomes a clear second task instead of a constant interruption. That separation is especially helpful for notes, outlines, email drafts, and short articles.

The live counts can guide the shape of a piece without becoming a target of their own. A word count shows whether a response is still thin or has started to wander. Sentence and paragraph counts reveal blocks that may be hard to scan. They do not measure quality, but they provide quick orientation while you are working in a plain editor with no document setup or formatting decisions to distract you.

Run the grammar check after names, numbers, and the main sequence of ideas are stable. Review one suggestion at a time and read the complete sentence before accepting it. A checker may not understand deliberate fragments, product names, dialect, or a technical term. Keeping control of each change protects the meaning and prevents a polished sentence from becoming less accurate than the imperfect line it replaced.

Turn a rough note into copy you can use

Begin the proofread with structure rather than punctuation. Make sure the opening tells the reader what the note is about, related details sit together, and the final line provides the expected action or conclusion. Then look for long sentences carrying several different ideas. Splitting one crowded sentence often improves clarity more than several tiny grammar fixes, and it makes later proofreading easier.

On the next pass, check verbs, pronouns, and transitions. Confirm that the subject of each sentence is obvious and that words such as this, that, or it point to something unmistakable. Remove throat-clearing phrases when the sentence becomes stronger without them. If a line sounds unusually formal beside the rest of the note, rewrite it in the same voice as the surrounding paragraphs instead of keeping a technically correct mismatch.

Use the final read for small details: capitalization, repeated spaces, missing words, and punctuation around lists or quotations. Reading aloud at a calm pace exposes dropped words and accidental repetition remarkably well. When the note feels complete, copy or download the clean version and give it a useful filename. The notepad is intentionally simple, so your own review remains the part that turns a corrected draft into thoughtful writing.