Sentence examples for artificial writing from inspiring English sources

The phrase "artificial writing" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe writing that is generated or produced by artificial means, such as algorithms or AI, rather than by human authorship.
Example: "The novel was criticized for its reliance on artificial writing, lacking the emotional depth typically found in human-created literature."
Alternatives: "computer-generated text" or "machine-produced writing".

Exact(3)

The artificial writing medium of papyrus was invented by the middle of the 1st dynasty.

(This visual signature is not evident in artificial writing systems, such as shorthand, which are designed to emphasize speed more than visual recognition).

Mr. DeMunn and Ms. O'Connell are reliable experts in bringing a sense of bruised humanity to the characters they play, but Mr. Glaudini's underfueled and often artificial writing gives them little scope, and Mr. Hoffman's listless direction compounds the problem.

Similar(57)

Both boys misspelled "pasigraphy," an artificial written language designed for universal use.

Derek Malcolm Andi Engel, of Artificial Eye, writes: The first film I saw of KK was Personnel.

"My writers and art directors were experiencing these focus groups as a kind of nonreality, as something artificial," he writes.

It would, however, be artificial to write as if the information for this unique period were no better than that available for any other.

"In today's theater, sound amplification has a way of making the live performance seem more artificial," Mr. Canby wrote in 1995.

I fear that the great tradition of English artificial comedy, written mainly by Irishmen and running from the Restoration to Oscar Wilde, is in danger.

"Given the arms race nature of competition," will technological advantages cause "athletes to do something as seemingly radical as having their healthy natural limbs replaced by artificial ones?" wrote George Dvorsky, a member of the institute's board of directors.

In 1812, the French physiologist Julien Jean César Le Gallois made an intriguing prediction: "If one could substitute for the heart an injection of arterial blood... either natural or artificial," he wrote, "one would succeed easily in maintaining alive indefinitely any part of the body".

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