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13,47525Released 17d agoFree + from $9.9/mo

Humanize๐ ๏ธ 1 tool ๐ 25 karmaOct 18, 2025Hey TAAFT, real talk. AI gives you ideas. But, it doesn't give you a voice. Enter Humanize.sh. We make AI text sound like a real person, not a bot. Fast, private, and low effort. How: Paste. Humanize. Copy. Done. Works with ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, and all the usual suspects. Made for students who want clear essays, honest emails to profs, and captions that donโt scream โgeneratedโ. Teachers, creators, everyone welcome. Privacy: we never store your text. Want a demo? Drop one sentence and we'll humanize it live :) -
80010Released 1mo agoFree + from $8/mo

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20,41519Released 2mo agoFree + from $8/mo
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22,781517Released 1mo ago100% FreeClever AI Humanizer is a smart solution for making AI text more 'human' at no cost. I've tried it myself, and the results are truly natural, not robotic. Highly recommended for those who frequently use AI for content! ๐๐ผ
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Open1,30842Released 26d ago100% FreeI often struggle to find the right words, but this tool helps me polish my expressions and make my writing flow naturally.
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4,32627Released 5mo agoFree + from $19.99/mo
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25,578211Released 2y agoFree + from $10/mo
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2,27626Released 1y agoFree + from $7/moDidnโt find it helpful they all are working on same memory model
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1,16811Released 3mo agoFree + from $6/mo
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51,448713Released 2y agoFree + from $12/moZero GPT which is supposed to be covered detects it with 100% certainty. So... No.
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Humanize AI text into undetectable and convincing human content.Open18,44637Released 1y agoFree + from $19.99Best one! The only one that does not add mistakes to fool AI detectors. -
2,20623Released 25d agoFree + from $5/mo
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6,994244Released 1y ago100% FreeThe humanization is good it bypasses most AI detectors; besides you don't need to pay for it, it just gives like a promotion at the end of the message that is not annoying at all. So, it doesn't have a limitation of free tokens or something like that.
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Transform AI-Generated text into content that feels like it's written by humanOpen14,369108Released 4mo agoFree + from $5Thanks for reaching out. We are committed to provide great user experience. - Didn't find the AI you were looking for?
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2,42160Released 1y agoFree + from $9.9/moVery, very short โfreeโ leash of 200 words. I didnโt give it a second whirl after that. Smh. Maybe limit free to about 1,000 Words. Or limit functions instead of characters. But I donโt knowโฆ Iโm nothing but a chump layman here so donโt mind me
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7,36555Released 2y ago100% FreeIn my case, it didn't help at all. It just made the text unreadable.
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6,304138Released 1y ago100% FreeThe major problem with this product is the limited word count. I tried an article with 975 words and it only humanized about 160 words.
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3,48242Released 8mo agoFree + from $7/mo
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1,07312Released 1y agoFree + from $5/mo
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51112Released 13d agoFree + from $4.99/mo
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1,75113Released 1y ago100% Free
Ask the community
Nabasa Isaac
๐ 1 karma
Oct 31, 2024
# Part (a): Add a Student
def add_student(student_list, student_id, name, age, course):
# Check for unique student ID
for student in student_list:
if student['student_id'] == student_id:
print(f"Error: Student ID {student_id} already exists!")
return
# Add the new student
student_list.append({
'student_id': student_id,
'name': name,
'age': age,
'course': course
})
print(f"Student {name} added successfully.")
# Part (b1): Find a Student by ID
def find_student_by_id(student_list, student_id):
for student in student_list:
if student['student_id'] == student_id:
return student
print("Student not found!")
return None
# Part (b2): Remove a Student by ID
def remove_student_by_id(student_list, student_id):
for student in student_list:
if student['student_id'] == student_id:
student_list.remove(student)
print(f"Student ID {student_id} removed successfully.")
return
print("Student not found!")
# Part (c): Class Definitions
class Person:
def __init__(self, name, age):
self.name = name
self.age = age
def __str__(self):
return f"Name: {self.name}, Age: {self.age}"
class Student(Person):
def __init__(self, name, age, course):
super().__init__(name, age)
self.course = course
def study(self):
print(f"Student is studying {self.course}")
class Instructor(Person):
def __init__(self, name, age, subject):
super().__init__(name, age)
self.subject = subject
def teach(self):
print(f"Instructor is teaching {self.subject}")
# Demonstration of polymorphism
student1 = Student("Alice", 20, "Mathematics")
instructor1 = Instructor("Bob", 40, "Physics")
print(student1) # Uses __str__ from Person
student1.study() # Calls study method from Student
print(instructor1) # Uses __str__ from Person
instructor1.teach() # Calls teach method from Instructor
# Part (d): Higher-order function for sorting students
def sort_students(student_list, key_function):
return sorted(student_list, key=key_function)
# Sample student list
students = [
{"student_id": 1, "name": "Alice", "age": 20, "course": "Mathematics"},
{"student_id": 2, "name": "Bob", "age": 22, "course": "Physics"},
{"student_id": 3, "name": "Charlie", "age": 19, "course": "Chemistry"}
]
# Demonstrate sorting by age
sorted_by_age = sort_students(students, key_function=lambda s: s["age"])
print("Students sorted by age:", sorted_by_age)
# Demonstrate sorting by name
sorted_by_name = sort_students(students, key_function=lambda s: s["name"])
print("Students sorted by name:", sorted_by_name)
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