List of Weak Words to Seach for While Editing! Print and Save This!

Today I am not blogging about book marketing! Shocking, I know!!!  Instead, I am posting about writing mechanics.  So, here we go!

 

Show, don't tell is a direction often given to writers to write in a such a way that allows readers to "experience the story through a character's action, words, thoughts, senses, and feelings rather than through the narrator's exposition, summarization, and description."  Source:  Wikipedia

 

While you are writing and editing your work, search for the following words and see if you can improve your sentences by eliminating many of the following words.  Print this off and keep it handy!  (If you haven't started editing yet and it's your first time, trust me, you'll thank me later!)

 

Words to Watch Out For:

Felt / Feel

Heard / Hear

Saw / See

Knew / know / had known

Wondered

Realized

Decided

Seemed

Began

Wished

Hoped

 

Use Active Voice, Not Passive:  Style of writing that helps to show, not tell!

Words to Check:  (remember in the 'find' feature to check the 'find exact match' box for words that are only two or three letters long)

To be

Is

Are

Was

Were

Has

Had

Have

Have Been

Did

Does

Do

Also: Past Participles (verb form often ending in -ed)

 

Other Weak Words:  I found myself starting off a lot of dialogue with "So, ..." and "Well, ..." and "Oh, ..."  which are really not needed.

Oh

Just

Well

So

Like

As

As if

While

 

Jill Elizabeth Nelson presented some great before and after examples in her article "On With the Show; Off With the Tell":

Instead of writing, He thought a good bath wouldn’t hurt the dog, write, Whew! A good bath would do this dog a world of good.

Instead of, She feels a sinking sensation in her middle, write, Her stomach drops to her toes.

Instead of, He knew that if she did that, she’d fail, write, If she did that, she’d fail.

Instead of, She wondered how she would get through the next day, write, How could she possibly survive the next day?

Instead of, I wished I hadn’t said that, write, If only I hadn’t said that.

View her article HERE - it is very helpful! 

More in depth articles on Show, Don't Tell:

http://jerz.setonhill.edu/writing/creative1/showing/

http://www.freelancewriting.com/articles/show-dont-tell-in-fiction-writing...

http://www.bellaonline.com/articles/art47547.asp

http://www.suite101.com/content/show-dont-tell-a110319

 

Does anyone else have other advice or words to watch out for??

 

I have been doing line edits this week, so this has been on my brain!  Best of luck to everyone!  Cheers! Jan

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Tags: active, craft, passive, show, writing

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Comment by Tia Silverthorne Bach on September 27, 2011 at 9:37am
I am editing two works right now and find these errors quite common (in addition the use of wondered when a writer means wandered). Thanks for the reminder. Great list!
Comment by Bridget Straub on September 27, 2011 at 9:35am
I am guilty of using "just" way too offten.
Comment by Jan Fischer Wade on September 27, 2011 at 9:21am

Thanks for stopping by Courtney!  Best of luck on your writing!

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