You speak English well. You understand meetings, read articles, follow conversations. But when you write — Slack messages, emails, LinkedIn posts — something feels off. Not wrong, exactly. Just not
quite native.
Here are the patterns that give away non-native writers, and how to fix them.
1. Cut the formal opener
Starting with "I hope this email finds you well" or "As per my previous email" — technically correct, but native speakers almost never write this. It reads as bureaucratic.
Instead:
❌ "I am writing to inquire about the status of my application."
✅ "Just checking in on my application — any updates?"
2. Use contractions in casual contexts
Non-native writers avoid contractions because they learned formal grammar first. "I am," "it is," "do not" — stiff when the context is casual.
In Slack, casual emails, LinkedIn comments — use contractions. Save full forms for legal documents.
3. Stop hedging everything
"I was wondering if perhaps it might be possible to..." reads as uncertain, not polite.
❌ "I was thinking that maybe we could perhaps consider moving the deadline if that would be okay."
✅ "Could we push the deadline by a day? I want to make sure the output is solid."
Direct requests with a brief reason are more respected — not less polite.
4. Watch for literal translations
Phrases that make sense in your native language produce awkward English word-for-word:
- "Make a question" → Ask a question
- "It depends of" → It depends on
- "In the other hand" → On the other hand
5. Vary your sentence length
Non-native writers often write in uniform, medium-length sentences. Each one correct. Each one the same rhythm. Native writing mixes it up — short punches followed by longer sentences that build on the
idea.
Read your draft out loud. If it sounds like a metronome, break it up.
6. Articles: the invisible enemy
If your native language has no articles (Russian, Chinese, Japanese, Turkish...), "a," "an," "the" will trip you up for years.
Highest-impact fix: use the for specific/established things, a/an for introducing something new.
❌ "We need to make decision. Decision will affect entire team."
✅ "We need to make a decision. The decision will affect the entire team."
7. End emails with action, not formality
❌ "Please do not hesitate to contact me should you require any further information."
✅ "Let me know if you have questions." / "Happy to jump on a call if easier."
8. Read out loud
If you stumble reading it aloud, your reader stumbles mentally. Rewrite until it flows.
The shortcut
All of this takes years to internalize. If you need to write professionally in English right now — in a job interview, a client email, a LinkedIn post — I built Limato: a Chrome
extension that rewrites your text in a native tone, inline, wherever you type.
Originally published on limato.app
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