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How to Edit Draft Language on Your Creations ✏️

Type directly for quick tweaks or chat with Nookly for bigger rewrites, style changes, and variations tailored to your needs!

Malak Abdelghaffar avatar
Written by Malak Abdelghaffar
Updated over 2 weeks ago

Once your draft is ready, it’s time to make it your own! In the Edit Draft Language step, you can review the text, swap out words, and adjust sentences so that your creation fits your needs!

🔄 Two ways to edit text on your creations:

  1. Direct Text Editing

    • Click directly on the text you want to change.

    • Type your new word, phrase, or sentence.

    • Changes will save automatically.

    Example:


    ❌ “a curious rabbit” → ✅ “a happy rabbit”

2. Chat with Nookly

Sometimes you want bigger changes, and that’s where the chat comes in. You can:

  • Ask for rewrites in a different tone.

  • Request simpler or more complex versions.

  • Suggest specific text you’d like swapped in.

  • Let Nookly generate another version for you.

Example prompts to try:

  • “Make the third page sentence simpler for a 5-year-old.”

  • “Rewrite this in a rhyming style.”

  • “Can you make the character sound braver?”

❌ Less Helpful Prompt

✅ Better Prompt

Why It Works Better

“Fix this page.”

“Make the text on page 3 shorter and easier for a 5-year-old to understand.”

Gives a clear goal (shorter + simpler).

“Make this sentence nicer.”

“Rewrite the sentence on card 4 to sound more exciting and adventurous.”

Adds direction about tone and style.

“Change the character.”

“Change the character from a bunny to a puppy.”

Specific about what to change.

“Too long.”

“Can you make the text on the story much shorter?”

Sets an exact length for the rewrite.

“Rhyming please.”

“Rewrite the text so that each line ends with a rhyme.”

Explains how you want the rhyming applied.

“I don’t like this.”

“Replace ‘curious’ with ‘brave’ and make the tone more confident.”

Tells Nookly both what to replace and what mood to set.

💡 Tip: The more specific you are, the better the results. Think in terms of tone, length, style, or substitutions when writing your prompt.

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