Phrases – 1 (For talking to Chat GPT)
Your System at a Glance
| Abbrev | What it does |
|---|---|
| CT | Condense only |
| PAE | Extract practical advice |
| PAE+ | Extract + brief clarification |
| CW1 | C1 corrections only |
| CW2 | B2 + C1 corrections |
Yep = Yes, please
PAE+ from this transcript, please.
PAE from this transcript, please.
Corrected (B2 level): "Not right now. Thank you!"
Corrected (C1 level, more natural): "Not at the moment. Thank you!"
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C1 Version (More Natural and Fluent):
User: Could you write out your corrections and explanations, and then give me two versions of our conversation—one at B2 level and one at C1, as usual? Thanks in advance!
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B2 Version (Clear and Correct)
"Could you please do CW2 for the text below?"
C1 Version (More Natural and Fluent)
"Could you provide CW2 for the text below?" or
"Could you do a CW2 analysis on the text below?"
Here are some alternative ways to phrase your request, with different levels of formality and naturalness:
Formal & Polished
- "Could you please provide CW2 for the text below?"
- "Would you mind doing CW2 for the text below?"
- "Could you write a CW2 analysis for the text below?"
Neutral & Natural
- "Could you do CW2 for the text below?"
- "Can you provide CW2 for the text below?"
For talking with colleagues, Formal & Polished and Neutral & Natural are the best choices. The Casual & Conversational options might be too informal for a professional setting, unless you have a very relaxed relationship with your colleagues.
Best choices for colleagues:
✔ Formal & Polished – Great for emails, reports, or when speaking to senior colleagues.
✔ Neutral & Natural – Perfect for everyday work conversations, especially with teammates.
Examples for colleagues:
- Email to a colleague: "Could you provide CW2 for the text below?" (Polished and professional)
- Asking a teammate in a chat: "Could you do CW2 for the text below?" (Natural and direct)----------------------------------------------------
PAE = When the user writes 'PAE' (Practical Advice Extraction), they want the assistant to extract and distill actionable, practical advice from a transcript or text, not a simple summary.
PAE+ = “Please review this transcript and extract the practical tips in a concise, note-like format. If a tip is unclear on its own, add a brief clarification (1–2 lines).”
-
PAE → strict extraction
-
PAE+ → extraction + minimal clarification
PAE+ from this transcript, please.
PAE from this transcript, please.
Please condense this transcript. No analysis.
Your Saved Abbreviations
CT
Meaning:
Please condense this transcript. No analysis.
Purpose:
Pure compression. Shorter text, same content.
No interpretation, no evaluation, no advice extraction.
PAE (Practical Advice Extraction)
Meaning:
Please review this transcript and extract the practical tips in a concise, note-like format.
Purpose:
Extract actionable advice only.
No analysis, no judgment, no teaching.
PAE+
Meaning:
Please review this transcript and extract the practical tips in a concise, note-like format. If a tip is unclear on its own, add a brief clarification (1–2 lines).
Purpose:
Same as PAE, but with minimal clarification only when necessary.
CW1
Meaning:
-
Corrections with explanations
-
C1-level conversational versions only
-
No B2 versions
Purpose:
High-level, natural English suitable for real conversations.
CW2
Meaning:
-
Corrections with explanations
-
Both B2 and C1 conversational versions
Purpose:
Compare clarity (B2) vs natural fluency (C1).
Optional (not an abbreviation, but a saved rule)
“Yep”
Interpreted as:
Yes, please