We must rewrite article using only facts from source, different headline, different paragraph order, varied sentences, no sentence-length uniformity, avoid banned phrases, etc. Must be human-like.
We must not fabricate quotes; only use quotes that exist verbatim. The source includes a quote: “When traffic demand from four lanes is suddenly reduced to one or two, drivers often lose the patience to follow the zipper merge principle, under which vehicles from each lane merge alternately. Instead, every driver competes to be first, creating conflict, long queues, aggressive driving, and often road rage. This is not merely a driver’s dilemma— it is fundamentally a traffic engineering failure,” explained Rohit Baluja, director of Institute of Road Traffic Education. Also mentions private bus pickups need designated bays etc.
We must not invent names? We can use names given: Ishita Jairath / TNN / Jul 15, 2026, 10:21 ISTCommentsShareAA… The source mentions “Ishita Jairath / TNN / Jul 15, 2026, 10:21 IST”. That seems like author. Also mentions Rohit Baluja, director of Institute of Road Traffic Education.
We must not invent statistics; we can mention “two evenings in early July”. That’s from source. Must not change location names; it’s Akshardham-Noida corridor. Must keep “Rajasthan” etc? Not relevant.
We must not translate sentence-by-sentence; rewrite fresh.
We must produce HTML article. Starting with ===BODY=== tags? Actually output format says: after ===TAGS===, then ===BODY===, with complete HTML article. Should we wrap article in HTML tags? Probably yes, they want HTML article. So inside ===BODY=== we need to output something like
…
etc. Or just plain text? They said “Complete HTML article”. So we should output HTML tags.
We must ensure minimum 400 words. Let’s aim for ~460 words.
We must include internal links optionally (0-1 max). Could include maybe link to Travel category.
We must not include external links unless relevant; we can skip.
We must avoid banned phrases.
We must not start sentences with “Overall” etc.
We must vary sentence length.
We must start with most important fact: “Almost every evening the Akshardham-Noida corridor jams despite its signal‑free design.” That’s key.
We must not copy original headline exactly; need new one 52-65 characters.
Let’s craft title: maybe “Akshardham-Noida Road Jams Despite Lack of Signals”. Count characters: Let’s count. “Akshardham-Noida Road Jams Despite Lack of Signals”. Count characters including spaces: A(1)k2s3h4a5r6d7h8a9m10-11N12o13i14d15a16 space17R18o19a20d21 space22J23a24m25s26 space27D28e29s30p31i32t33e34 space35L36a37c38k39 space40o41f42 space43S44i45g46n47a48l49s50. That’s 50 characters. Need 52-65. Add “Every Evening”. Let’s add “Every Evening”. Add space then “Every Evening”. That’s 12 characters inc space? Actually space then E… Let’s count: space (51) E52 v53 e54 r55 y56 space57 E58 v59 e60 n61 i62 n63 g64. So total 64 characters. Let’s recount full string: “Akshardham-Noida Road Jams Despite Lack of Signals Every Evening”. Let’s count precisely:
String: Akshardham-Noida Road Jams Despite Lack of Signals Every Evening
Let’s count each character:
1 A
2 k
3 s
4 h
5 a
6 r
7 d
8 h
9 a
10 m
11 –
12 N
13 o
14 i
15 d
16 a
17 space
18 R
19 o
20 a
21 d
22 space
23 J
24 a
25 m
26 s
26? Actually we need continue: after “Jams” there is space then “Despite”. Let’s recount correctly:
I’ll write full string with indices:
“Akshardham-Noida Road Jams Despite Lack of Signals Every Evening”
Let’s write characters sequentially:
1 A
2 k
3 s
4 h
5 a
6 r
7 d
8 h
9 a
10 m
11 –
12 N
13 o
14 i
15 d
16 a
17 space
18 R
19 o
20 a
21 d
22 space
23 J
24 a
25 m
25? Wait we need correct indexing: after “Jams” there is space then “Despite”. Actually we wrote “Jams”. Let’s continue:
After index 23? Let’s recount from start again with proper segmentation:
String: Akshardham-Noida Road Jams Despite Lack of Signals Every Evening
Break into words:
Akshardham-Noida (12 characters? Actually includes hyphen) Let’s count precisely.
Better to count using a tool mentally: I’ll count characters including spaces.
“Akshardham-Noida” = 13? Let’s count: A1 k2 s3 h4 a5 r6 d7 h8 a9 m10 -10? Actually hyphen counts as char: 10? Let’s just count: letters: A(1) k2 s3 h4 a5 r6 d7 h8 a9 m10 -11 N12 o13 i14 d15 a16. So “Akshardham-Noida” is 16 characters.
Then space = 17.
Then “Road” = 4 letters: 18 R,19 o20 a21 d22. So after “Road” we are at 22.
Then space = 23.
Then “Jams” = 4 letters: 24 J,25 a26 m27 s28.
Then space = 29.
Then “Despite” = 7 letters: 30 D,31 e32 s33 p34 i35 t36 e37.
Then space = 38.
Then “Lack” = 4 letters: 39 L,40 a41 c42 k43.
Then space = 44.
Then “of” = 2 letters: 45 o46 f47.
Then space = 48.
Then “Signals” = 7 letters: 49 S,50 i51 g52 n53 a54 l55 s56.
Then space = 57.
Then “Every” = 5 letters: 58 E,59 v59? Actually careful: after space we have “Every”: 58 E,59 v,60 e,61 r,62 y.
Then space = 63.
Then “Evening” = 7 letters: 64 E,65 v66 e67 n68 i69 n70 g71.
So total characters = 71. That’s too many. Need 52-65 characters. So we need shorter title.
We need 52-65 characters. Let’s aim for about 58 characters.
Let’s craft a title: “Akshardham-Noida Corridor Jams Despite No Signals”. Count characters.
String: Akshardham-Noida Corridor Jams Despite No Signals
Count:
Akshardham-Noida = 16 as before. Then space = 17.
“Corridor” = 8 letters: 18 C,19 o20 r21 r22 i23 d24 o25 r26.
Space = 27.
“Jams” = 4 letters: 28 J,29 a30 m31 s32.
Space = 33.
“Despite” = 7 letters: 34 D,35 e36 s37 p38 i39 t40 e41.
Space = 42.
“No” = 2 letters: 43 N,44 o45.
Space = 46.
“Signals” = 7 letters: 47 S,48 i49 g50 n51 a52 l53 s54.
Total characters = 54. That’s within 52-65. Good. Title includes keyword “noida” (yes). Good.
Now meta description: 155-160 characters. Must be 155-160 characters exactly? It says 155-160 char meta description. So length must be between 155 and 160 inclusive. Let’s craft a meta description of exactly 158 characters (within range). Need to count characters.
Meta description sentence: “Even after a signal‑free corridor was built, commuters on the Akshardham‑Noida route face nightly jams caused by frequent stops, lane changes and bus pickups, leading to delays and rising pollution.” Let’s count characters.
I’ll count characters including spaces and punctuation.
String: Even after a signal‑free corridor was built, commuters on the Akshardham-Noida route face nightly jams caused by frequent stops, lane changes and bus pickups, leading to delays and rising pollution.
Let’s count.
I’ll write out with indices.
“Even after a signal‑free corridor was built, commuters on the Akshardham-Noida route face nightly jams caused by frequent stops, lane changes and bus pickups, leading to delays and rising pollution.”
Count characters:
1 E
2 v
3 e
4 n
5 space
6 a
7 f
8 t
9 e
10 r
11 space
12 a
13 space
14 s
15 i
16 g
17 n
18 a
19 l
20 ‑ (hyphen) actually there is an en dash? The source used “signal‑free” with a hyphen? It uses “signal‑free” (maybe en dash). We’ll treat as one character. Let’s just count as hyphen. So 20 hyphen? Actually we already at 20? Let’s recount carefully.
Better to write without special characters? Use simple hyphen. Let’s write: “Even after a signal-free corridor was built, commuters on the Akshardham-Noida route face nightly jams caused by frequent stops, lane changes and bus pickups, leading to delays and rising pollution.”
Now count.
I’ll count sequentially:
1 E
2 v
3 e
4 n
5 space
6 a
7 f
8 t
9 e
10 r
11 space
12 a
13 space
14 s
15 i
16 g
17 n
18 a
19 l
20 –
21 f
22 r
23 e
24 e
25 space
26 c
27 o
28 r
29 r
30 i
31 d
32 o
33 r
34 space
35 w
36 a
37 s
38 space
39 b
40 u
41 i
42 l
43 t
44 ,
45 space
46 c
47 o
48 m
49 m
50 u
51 t
52 e
53 r
54 s
55 space
56 o
57 n
58 space
59 t
60 h
61 e
62 space
63 A
64 k
65 s
66 h
67 a
68 r
69 d
70 h
71 a
72 m
73 –
74 N
75 o
76 i
77 d
78 a
79 space
80 r
81 o
82 u
83 t
84 e
85 space
86 f
87 a
88 c
89 e
90 space
91 n
92 i
93 g
94 h
95 t
96 l
97 y
98 space
99 j
100 a
101 m
102 s
103 space
104 c
105 a
106 u
107 s
108 e
109 d
110 space
111 b
112 y
113 space
114 f
115 r
116 e
117 q
118 u
119 e
120 n
121 t
122 space
123 s
124 t
125 o
126 p
127 s
128 ,
129 space
130 l
131 a
132 n
133 e
134 space
135 c
136 h
137 a
138 n
139 g
140 e
141 s
142 space
143 a
144 n
145 d
146 space
147 b
148 u
149 s
150 space
151 p
152 i
153 c
154 k
155 u
156 p
157 s
158 ,
159 space
160 l
161 e
162 a
163 d
164 i
165 n
166 g
167 space
168 t
169 o
170 space
171 d
172 e
173 l
174 a
175 y
176 s
177 space
178 a
179 n
180 d
181 space
182 r
183 i
184 s
185 i
186 n
187 g
188 space
189 p
190 o
191 l
192 l
193 u
194 t
195 i
196 o
197 n
198 .
Total 198 characters, too long. Need 155-160 characters. Let’s shorten.
We need exactly 155-160 characters. Let’s craft a meta of about 158 characters.
Try: “The signal‑free Akshardham-Noida corridor still jams nightly as buses stop, commuters change lanes and delays rise, adding pollution to the commute.” Let’s count.
String: The signal‑free Akshardham-Noida corridor still jams nightly as buses stop, commuters change lanes and delays rise, adding pollution to the commute.
Count characters.
I’ll write plain ASCII:
The signal-free Akshardham-Noida corridor still jams nightly as buses stop, commuters change lanes and delays rise, adding pollution to the commute.
Now count.
1 T
2 h
3 e
4 space
5 s
6 i
7 g
8 n
9 a
10 l
11 –
12 f
13 r
14 e
15 e
16 space
17 A
18 k
19 s
20 h
21 a
22 r
23 d
24 h
25 a
26 m
27 –
28 N
29 o
30 i
31 d
32 a
33 space
34 c
35 o
36 r
37 r
38 i
39 d
40 o
41 r
42 space
43 s
44 t
45 i
46 l
47 l
48 space
49 j
50 a
51 m
52 s
53 space
54 n
55 i
56 g
57 h
58 t
59 l
60 y
61 space
62 a
63 s
64 space
65 b
66 u
67 s
68 e
69 s
70 space
71 s
72 t
73 o
74 p
75 ,
76 space
77 c
78 o
79 m
80 m
81 u
82 t
83 e
84 r
85 s
86 space
87 c
88 h
89 a
90 n
91 g
92 e
93 space
94 l
95 a
96 n
97 e
98 s
99 space
100 a
101 n
102 d
103 space
104 d
105 e
106 l
107 a
108 y
109 s
110 space
111 r
112 i
113 s
114 e
115 ,
116 space
117 a
118 d
119 d
120 i
121 n
122 g
123 space
124 p
125 o
126 l
127 l
128 u
129 t
130 i
131 o
132 n
133 space
134 t
135 o
136 space
137 t
138 h
139 e
140 space
141 c
142 o
143 m
144 m
145 u
146 t
147 e
148 .
Total 148 characters. Need 155-160. Add a few words: “for daily travelers”. Let’s add “for daily travelers” before period.
Add “for daily travelers” (16 characters inc space?). Let’s add before period.
Current ends with “.” at char 148. Replace with ” for daily travelers.” So we add space then “for daily travelers” then period.
Let’s compute new length: original 148 includes period. We’ll remove period and add ” for daily travelers.” which length: space (1) f2 o3 r4 space5 d6 a7 i8 l9 y10 space11 t12 r13 a14 v15 e16 l17 e18 r19 s20 .21 So 21 characters. So new length = 148 -1 (old period) +21 = 168. Too long. Need 155-160. Let’s instead add “for commuters”. That’s 13 inc space? Let’s add ” for commuters”. That’s space + f o r space c o m m u t e r s = 13? Let’s count: space1 f2 o3 r4 space5 c6 o7 m8 m9 u10 t11 e12 r13 s14. Actually that’s 14 characters including leading space. So new length = 148 -1 +14 = 161. Slightly over max 160. Need 155-160, 161 is just over. Let’s add “for commuters” without leading space? We need a space before it if we replace period with ” for commuters”. That adds space. So we add 13 characters? Let’s compute precisely: ” for commuters” length = 13? Let’s count: space1 f2 o3 r4 space5 c6 o7 m8 m9 u10 t11 e12 r13 s14. Actually that’s 13? Let’s recount: characters: space (1), f (2), o (3), r (4), space (5), c (6), o (7), m (8), m (9), u (10), t (11), e (12), r (13), s (14). So 14 characters. So new length = 148 -1 +14 = 161. That’s too many. Need 155-160, so we need length 155-160. 161 is out. Let’s aim for 158. So we need to add 13 characters (since 148 -> target 158 need +10). Actually we need 155-160, so we can add 7-12 characters. Let’s add “for users”. That’s space + f o r space u s e r s = 8? Let’s count: space1 f2 o3 r4 space5 u6 s7 e8 r9 s10. That’s 10 characters. So new length = 148 -1 +10 = 157. Good, within 155-160. So we replace period with ” for users.” Actually we need to add ” for users.” including period at end. That’s space + f o r space u s e r s . That’s 11 characters? Let’s count: space1 f2 o3 r4 space5 u6 s7 e8 r9 s10 .11. So 11 characters. Then new length = 148 -1 +11 = 158. Perfect.
So final meta description: “The signal-free Akshardham-Noida corridor still jams nightly as buses stop, commuters change lanes and delays rise, adding pollution to the commute for users.”
But we need to ensure we have period at end. Let’s write exactly:
“The signal-free Akshardham-Noida corridor still jams nightly as buses stop, commuters change lanes and delays rise, adding pollution to the commute for users.”
Now count characters again to verify 158.
Let’s count again quickly:
“The signal-free Akshardham-Noida corridor still jams nightly as buses stop, commuters change lanes and delays rise, adding pollution to the commute for users.”
Count:
1 T
2 h
3 e
4 space
5 s
6 i
7 g
8 n
9 a
10 l
11 –
12 f
13 r
14 e
15 e
16 space
17 A
18 k
19 s
20 h
21 a
22 r
23 d
24 h
25 a
26 m
27 –
28 N
29 o
30 i
31 d
32 a
33 space
34 c
35 o
36 r
37 r
38 i
39 d
40 o
41 r
42 space
43 s
44 t
45 i
46 l
47 l
48 space
49 j
50 a
51 m
52 s
53 space
54 n
55 i
56 g
57 h
58 t
59 l
60 y
61 space
62 a
63 s
64 space
65 b
66 u
67 s
68 e
69 s
70 space
71 s
72 t
73 o
74 p
75 ,
76 space
77 c
78 o
79 m
80 m
81 u
82 t
83 e
84 r
85 s
86 space
87 c
88 h
89 a
90 n
91 g
92 e
93 space
94 l
95 a
96 n
97 e
98 s
99 space
100 a
101 n
102 d
103 space
104 d
105 e
106 l
107 a
108 y
109 s
110 space
111 r
112 i
113 s
114 e
115 ,
116 space
117 a
118 d
119 d
120 i
121 n
122 g
123 space
124 p
125 o
126 l
127 l
128 u
129 t
130 i
131 o
132 n
133 space
134 t
135 o
136 space
137 t
138 h
139 e
140 space
141 c
142 o
143 m
144 m
145 u
146 t
147 e
148 space
149 f
150 o
151 r
152 space
153 u
154 s
155 e
156 r
157 s
158 .
So 158 characters exactly. Good.
Now EXCERPT: 2 sharp sentences. Must be 2 sentences. Provide summary. Let’s craft: “Nightly jams choke the Akshardham‑Noida corridor despite its signal‑free design. Frequent stops and lane changes from buses and commuters create the bottleneck.”
That’s two sentences.
Now TAGS: 7-10 specific tags. Tags are likely category names. We can include: “Akshardham”, “Noida”, “Traffic”, “Road Congestion”, “Bus Stops”, “Commuting”, “Pollution”, “Delhi Traffic”. Must be 7-10 tags. Provide as a list? The format says ===TAGS=== then list? Probably just list separated by commas or line breaks? Not specified. We’ll just put tags separated by commas. Provide 8 tags.
Now BODY: HTML article, minimum 400 words, neutral tone, no AI markers. Must start with ===BODY=== then HTML.
We need to produce HTML article with paragraphs, varied length, human patterns.
We need to include internal link optionally (0-1 max). Could add link to Travel category: Travel. That’s relevant.
We must not exceed 600 words? Minimum 400, okay.
We must ensure we don’t start with “The” every paragraph; vary start.
We must include at least one paragraph that’s a single sentence.
We must vary sentence length.
We must include contractions not in source (it’s, don’t, hasn’t, won’t). Use them.
We must include one blunt short sentence for emphasis, like “This is chaos.” That’s short.
We must include a slightly opinionated phrase like “which is unusual” or “a rare admission”. Use “which is unusual”. Must not start with banned phrase. Use “which is unusual”. That’s allowed.
We must not use banned phrases like “It remains to be seen”. Avoid.
We must not use “Increasingly”. Use specific number if possible. Not needed.
We must not use “Going forward”. Use specific time.
We must not use “Overall, Notably, Importantly, Significantly, Furthermore, Moreover”. Avoid.
We must not start paragraph with “The”. So vary paragraph starts.
We must not end with “Stay tuned for more updates” etc.
We must not repeat same point.
We must include at least one internal link (optional). We’ll add maybe one link to Travel.
We must include external link only if relevant; not needed.
Now we need to write article about the same story: Akshardham-Noida corridor jams despite design, reasons, impact, expert quote, needed fixes.
We need to use only facts from source. So we can mention that “The corridor is wide, largely signal‑free and meant to move vehicles quickly”. “There is no red light waiting at the usual choke point”. “The jam appears every evening”. “The problem is most visible after evening, when commuter traffic, metro-linked pickups, temple-area movement and private interstate buses begin competing for the same road edge.” “Long-distance buses add friction”. “Boarding often means passengers searching for the bus, loading bags, gathering children and stepping in from the carriageway.” “Each action lasts briefly, but each makes the vehicle behind it brake.” “The delay cascades into offices, homes, dinner tables, school pickups and hospital appointments.” “He added that whenever a single car, bus, truck, or even an autorickshaw comes to a halt on a major arterial road, drivers instinctively shift into adjacent lanes to bypass the obstruction.” “The resulting lane‑changing forces vehicles in neighbouring lanes to brake or alter speed, triggering a chain reaction.” “When traffic demand from four lanes is suddenly reduced to one or two, drivers often lose the patience to follow the zipper merge principle, under which vehicles from each lane merge alternately. Instead, every driver competes to be first, creating conflict, long queues, aggressive driving, and often road rage.” Quote from Rohit Baluja. “The fixes are not mysterious. Private bus pickups need designated bays away from the moving carriageway. Cab waiting must be pushed into legal pickup zones.” Also mention “The strange thing about the Akshardham-Noida evening jam is not that traffic slows. It is that the road appears designed to prevent exactly that.” “The corridor is wide, largely signal‑free and meant to move vehicles quickly out of central Delhi towards east Delhi and Noida.” “There is no red light waiting at the usual choke point, no roundabout, no market crossing that should bring traffic to a crawl.” “Yet, almost every evening, brake lights begin glowing on a stretch that should have kept moving.” “TOI spent two evenings in early July on the corridor to track where the flow first breaks.” “What emerged was not one big bottleneck but a series of small interruptions.” “A vehicle waits where it should not. Another cuts lanes late. A cab stops for a booking. A private bus pulls over to pick up passengers. A family with luggage looks for the right coach along the edge of moving traffic.” “Each action lasts briefly, but each makes the vehicle behind it brake.”
Now rewrite with varied paragraphs.
Let’s draft:
Paragraph 1 (lead with most important fact): “Almost every evening the Akshardham‑Noida corridor jams, even though it was built without any traffic lights.” That’s short and important.
Paragraph 2: background: talk about design, width, purpose.
Paragraph 3: details of observed jams: series of small interruptions, examples.
Paragraph 4: impact: delays, pollution, cascades.
Paragraph 5: expert quote and cause: Rohit Baluja explanation, zipper merge, lane changing.
Paragraph 6: fixes and quote about bus pickups, cab zones.
Paragraph 7: concluding note: what happens next? maybe mention that authorities need to redesign bus bays, etc.
We must ensure at least one paragraph is a single sentence. Could make paragraph 4 a single sentence: “Delays spill over into offices, homes, school pickups and hospital appointments.” That’s a single sentence paragraph.
Now ensure paragraph variety and sentence length variation.
Now write article with at least 400 words.
Let’s draft text, then count words roughly.
Draft:
“Almost every evening the Akshardham‑Noida corridor jams, even though it was built without any traffic lights. Engineers had designed the stretch as a wide, largely signal‑free route to shuttle commuters quickly from central Delhi toward east Delhi and Noida.
The jam appears paradoxical. There is no red light waiting at the usual choke point, no roundabout, no market crossing that should bring traffic to a crawl. Yet, almost every evening, brake lights begin glowing on a stretch that should have kept moving. TOI spent two evenings in early July on the corridor to track where the flow first breaks. What emerged was not one big bottleneck but a series of small interruptions. A vehicle waits where it should not. Another cuts lanes late. A cab stops for a booking. A private bus pulls over to pick up passengers. A family with luggage looks for the right coach along the edge of moving traffic. Each action lasts briefly, but each makes the vehicle behind it brake.
Delays spill over into offices, homes, school pickups and hospital appointments. Engines idle, fuel burns, and pollution rises. The cost is not just time; it adds stress to daily routines and fills the air with exhaust.
Rohit Baluja, director of the Institute of Road Traffic Education, warned that whenever a single car, bus, truck, or even an autorickshaw halts on a major arterial road, drivers instinctively shift into adjacent lanes to bypass the obstruction. That maneuver forces neighbouring lanes to brake, creating a chain reaction that spreads across kilometres. When traffic demand from four lanes is suddenly reduced to one or two, drivers often lose the patience to follow the zipper merge principle, under which vehicles from each lane merge alternately. Instead, every driver competes to be first, creating conflict, long queues, aggressive driving, and often road rage. which is unusual for a corridor built to avoid such chaos.
The fixes are straightforward. Private bus pickups need designated bays away from the moving carriageway. Cab waiting must be pushed into legal pickup zones. Adjusting lane usage could restore the intended flow and reduce the nightly choke.”
Now we need to convert to HTML with paragraphs
…
. Ensure varied start, at least one single-sentence paragraph (we have one). Ensure no paragraph starts with “The” exclusively; we have some starting with “The jam appears paradoxical.” That’s okay but not “The” as first word? Actually it starts with “The jam appears paradoxical.” That starts with “The”. That’s not allowed? The rule: “Vary how paragraphs start — not every paragraph with ‘The'”. It doesn’t forbid starting with “The”, just says not every paragraph should start with “The”. So we can have some start with “The”. That’s fine as long as not every paragraph. We have multiple paragraphs starting with “The”? Let’s check: Paragraph 1 starts with “Almost every evening…” not “The”. Paragraph 2 starts with “The jam appears paradoxical.” That’s okay. Paragraph 3 starts with “Delays spill over…” not “The”. Paragraph 4 is single sentence “Rohit Baluja, director…” Actually that starts with “Rohit”. Good. Paragraph 5 starts with “The fixes are straightforward.” That’s “The”. That’s okay but we have multiple “The” starts. We need to vary, but not every paragraph. We have at least one paragraph not starting with “The”. That’s fine.
But we need to avoid too many “The” starts? It’s okay.
Now we need to ensure we have a blunt short sentence somewhere. Could add “This is chaos.” as a separate short sentence maybe in its own paragraph or within a paragraph. Let’s incorporate: maybe after expert quote, add a short blunt sentence “This is chaos.” That’s short (4 words). That’s okay.
Now we need to ensure we include a slightly opinionated phrase: “which is unusual” already used. That’s okay.
We need to avoid banned phrases. We didn’t use any banned phrase.
We need to avoid starting sentences with “Overall, Notably, Importantly, Significantly, Furthermore, Moreover”. We didn’t.
We need to ensure we have sentence length variety. Let’s check sentences.
We’ll rewrite final article with HTML tags.
Now we need to embed internal link maybe after paragraph about fixes: Travel. That should be placed somewhere.
Now ensure we have at least 400

