No writer can avoid this happening; at certain times in the writing process, certain words cling on, sometimes in the subconscious, and are used too often. Each writer will have their own words and phrases which they tend to fall back upon without even noticing. At the time of writing there’s nothing wrong with this, it’s good to maintain the writing flow rather than be concerned with word-repetition.
After having written well over 2 million published words, I’m aware of some words that I tend to opt for too frequently, hence the list below.
In my years of editing other people’s work I find that the most repeated words for many an author are: smiled, laughed, nodded, saw, pointed, suddenly, and shrugged. One of the biggest mistyped is ‘though’ for ‘through’ and vice versa, which a spell-checker won’t detect.
Bearing in mind that this word-repetition check was against my current book of about 105,000 words, there are not too many word repetitions anyway; mainly because I’ve become familiar with most, so consciously avoid ‘laughed’ and ‘sighed’, for example, while not interfering with the flow.
I recommend you conduct a search for certain words. You might be surprised at the number of highlighted words you discover on the same page and often close together!
My search turned up these shown below.
Once you’ve found the word, scroll through the text, examining each highlighted example, seeing if the word is actually necessary at all, or maybe a different word might suffice and be an improvement. Try to reduce the frequency of the word where several are shown in close proximity; it’s not unusual for the same word to appear four or more times in a single paragraph!
This process sometimes reveals inconsistencies and logic errors in the text, which is all to the good.
Certain words are not always necessary – the biggest culprits being ‘down’ as in ‘sat down’ and ‘up’ in ‘stood up’; there are similar variants.
Repeated words template – August 2021
Repeated word |
Before |
After edit |
Repeated word |
Before |
After edit |
smiled |
32 |
16 |
shook |
37 |
28 |
nodded |
84 |
32 |
appeared |
47 |
39 |
laughed |
14 |
11 |
peered |
21 |
15 |
grinned |
13 |
11 |
abruptly |
13 |
11 |
sighed |
14 |
12 |
shrugged |
22 |
16 |
looked |
55 |
38 |
eyed |
20 |
17 |
moment |
32 |
19 |
instant |
22 |
20 |
glanced |
25 |
21 |
gazed |
6 |
6 |
few |
68 |
44 |
some |
23 |
22 |
down |
103 |
67 |
up |
180 |
116 |
out |
103 |
67 |
back |
80 |
66 |
just |
51 |
34 |
askance |
2 |
2 |
called |
36 |
31 |
glimpsed |
14 |
12 |
saw |
36 |
35 |
gestured |
23 |
20 |
walked |
29 |
26 |
sensed |
26 |
21 |
ran |
43 |
32 |
believed |
20 |
17 |
pointed |
27 |
23 |
strode |
17 |
15 |
suddenly |
11 |
10 |
away |
73 |
52 |
seemed |
91 |
49 |
off |
85 |
62 |
felt |
69 |
58 |
noticed |
44 |
40 |
thought |
50 |
41 |
though |
91 |
59 |
stepped |
53 |
35 |
turned |
80 |
51 |
You will see on the list that some variants are shown close together: for example, moment and instant; few and some; gazed and glanced; down and up. So beware of substituting one repetitive word with another on the list; yes, it can be done, but adjust the total so you know where you are.
Good luck.
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