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Reviews

Grammarly's AI: How NLP Powers Grammar Checking Beyond Rules

Equipo Editorial de WhatAI··8 min de lecture

Grammarly moved from rule-based grammar checking to neural NLP. Here's what changed and why it matters.

Beyond Rule-Based Grammar

Early Grammarly used hand-coded grammar rules — a massive database of patterns to flag and suggest corrections. Modern Grammarly uses transformer-based NLP models that understand language in context, not just pattern matching. This is why it can now detect tone, style, and subtle meaning issues that no rule set could capture.

The Multi-Model Architecture

Grammarly runs multiple specialized models simultaneously: a grammar/spelling model, a style model, a tone detector, a clarity scorer, and GrammarlyGO for generation. Each model is optimized for its task — smaller, faster models for real-time checking, larger models for generation tasks. This ensemble approach balances latency with quality.

Context-Aware Suggestions

The key upgrade over rule-based systems: Grammarly's neural models understand that "I saw the man with the telescope" is ambiguous, while a rule would only check for subject-verb agreement. Suggestions are ranked by a learned model of what makes writing effective in a given context — academic writing gets different suggestions than casual email.

The Business Model Advantage

Grammarly's 30M+ user base generates an enormous implicit training signal — which suggestions users accept or reject, and in what contexts. This feedback loop continuously improves the model in ways that smaller competitors can't replicate. Network effects in AI training data are a genuine competitive moat. See Grammarly in our catalog →

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