The
new version of Word makes this easier – and more alarming – than before.
Using
the search facility, I can discover how many times I’ve used particular words.
We all have words we tend to over-use, and it’s quite easy to gloss over their
frequent usage in an entire piece of work. In my years as editor, I’ve
encountered a number of common words and outlined some of these in my book Write a Western in 30 Days (p152).
Here
is a list of words I’ve searched for and discovered that I’ve over-used. In
many instances, the word probably can be dispensed with entirely; in other
cases, it should be replaced; in some situations, it must stay to do the job
intended.
Suddenly
– this slips in so easily; all of a sudden, it's there.
Down
– really, deep down, most instances of this can be excised; at least cut down
on the use of this one.
Up
– again, the same as ‘down’, often in the same paragraph… Look them up and you’ll
be surprised…
Out
– not often necessary, or use an alternative word or phrase; cut out as many as
you can.
In
– the same as ‘out’, the word sidles in without knowing…
Just
– these just keep sneaking in, too, suddenly, it seems; most can be excised.
Most often just used in speech – but don’t overdo that too.
Began
to – this is passive; act now and use an active variant!
Grinned
– you have to laugh at how often this occurs; excise, or find another
mannerism.
Laughed
– don’t grin and bear it, make sure it is appropriate; often the dialogue
conveys the humour/laughter anyway.
Sighed – see my blog of 2 October 2013 to size up this one…
Chuckled – an alternative, but also overdone.
Smiled – often used as a speech attribution, as is ‘sighed’, ‘laughed’, ‘chuckled’ and ‘grinned’ – wrongly, since you can’t speak and make those facial actions at the same time; it’s shorthand for lazy writers, meaning ‘I wanted to say that he laughed,’ he said and smiled – not, ‘I wanted to say that he laughed,’ he smiled.
Shrugged – a useful gesture, but perhaps overdone; seek other gestures, perhaps?
Nodded – oh, yes, this crops up a lot, and I’ve been tempted to give the nod to some instances, but generally excise 50% - let the speech or mannerism convey the nod.
Shook – often hands are shaken (not stirred), but it can be other body parts; are they all necessary (the use of ‘shook’/’shake’, not the body parts)?
Snapped
– another useful term, but have a care as its strength can be diminished if
over-used.
Back
– I keep coming back to this one; I see it in the same paragraph and repeated
frequently on the same page. I have to be ruthless with this, and tend to cut
back quite a few of them!
Good luck.
3 comments:
Suddenly and just seem to be the main culprits in much of my reading and editing. Good tips, and that is a good word tool all writers will find helpful.
Thanks for a good list of "no no" words.
Thanks for the feedback, Neil and Nancy! I read these out to today's writers' circle gathering and a couple of attendees detected some of these culprit words duplicated in their offerings!
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