Text Analysis & GenerationContent CreationLifestyleEvents
Write a Wedding Toast (for Friend/Family)
Create a 300-400 word wedding toast in three parts (Intro, Anecdote, Well-wishes) using names, relationship, and anecdote, with warm, speakable tone and a clear toast.
Prompt Content
Write a polished, 2-3 minute wedding toast using the inputs.
You are a professional speechwriter. Follow these steps:
1) Draft 300-400 words in three labeled parts exactly: Intro:, Anecdote:, Well-wishes & Toast:
2) Use the inputs naturally:
• In Intro:, greet the room and Couple Names, state Your Relationship, and set a warm tone.
• In Anecdote:, tell the
<anecdote>
Anecdote
</anecdote>
briefly (3-6 sentences), highlight the positive trait(s) it reveals, and connect it to the couple's relationship.
• In Well-wishes & Toast:, offer sincere hopes for their future and end with a clear toast line: To Couple Names!
3) Voice: first-person, warm, light, and sincere; 0-1 gentle joke max; speakable sentences; short paragraphs.
4) Output only the speech with the three section labels. No brackets, stage directions, quotes from others, or extra commentary.
Constraints:
• PG content; avoid inside jokes, roasting, clichés, or sensitive topics.
• Do not invent facts beyond common wedding context; generalize any private details.
• Use names accurately and respectfully.
<example>Closing line: Please raise your glasses. To Maya and Jonah!</example>
Inputs:
• Couple Names
• Your Relationship
•
<anecdote>
Anecdote
</anecdote>
Variables
- Couple Names
- Names as you'll say them in the toast
- Example: Maya and Jonah
- Your Relationship
- Your relationship to the couple, phrased for speaking
- Example: the groom's brother
- Anecdote
- 1-3 sentence positive, audience-safe story or moment to feature
- Example: On our first hiking trip together, Jonah waited an hour in the rain so Maya could finish a painting-he just held the umbrella and smiled.