When you write, you should always use strong verbs. Strong verbs tell more about something than a weaker verb.
Walk is a weak verb.
You can change it up to be swagger, hobbled, zoomed, etc.
Look is a weak verb.
You can change it to appear, peer, stare, etc.
You don't always have to use strong verbs, but in most cases, it engages your reader a little more. It can tell more about characters. Or it can make a better paper.
This blog has the hopes of teaching you how to increase your writing abilities both creatively and technically.
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Monday, April 11, 2011
Verb Tense
For Essays: Always use Past Tense!
In creative writing, you have a choice between past and present. Future is difficult. It's wierd and hardly works.
For present, there is a sense of urgency. You need to be reading what is happening to me right this second because it is very important and happening right now.
Most writers just stick to the past because it is easier to play off and makes it more timeless. I mean, if someone picked up your work in a thousand years and it was in present, then people might not truly get it. For me, it's all about sticking to the past.
BUT! Most importantly, whatever tense you pick, stick to that tense. If you do use past, though, make sure that in dialogue, you use present tense because we always speak presently when we are talking in the now.
In creative writing, you have a choice between past and present. Future is difficult. It's wierd and hardly works.
For present, there is a sense of urgency. You need to be reading what is happening to me right this second because it is very important and happening right now.
Most writers just stick to the past because it is easier to play off and makes it more timeless. I mean, if someone picked up your work in a thousand years and it was in present, then people might not truly get it. For me, it's all about sticking to the past.
BUT! Most importantly, whatever tense you pick, stick to that tense. If you do use past, though, make sure that in dialogue, you use present tense because we always speak presently when we are talking in the now.
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