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Active Verbs VS
Passive Verbs In Fiction
By
[http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Sandra_Haven]Sandra Haven
Most writers tend to use too few active verbs and too many
passive ones in their stories. Passive verbs are like telling
readers what you, the author, think is the case. They don't
allow readers to see, feel or experience the scenes for
themselves.
Passives don’t pull readers into a story in an active,
immediate or personal way. Passive verbs explain what happened
to the character, as if the character was acted upon instead of
being a character who took action.
These verbs include was, were, had, seemed, thought,
etc. Basically any
verb whose action a reader can’t visualize is probably too
passive to hold much impact. Another form of passives are
gerunds, which take a normally active verb and adds an “-ing”
to the end and starts it with a was type verb,
like was
running.
Certainly sometimes passives are just fine. They serve a real
purpose - at times. But most times an active verb will enliven
a sentence. And active verbs are particularly essential in
active, hot, tense scenes.
For instance, in a scene where Sally is being pursued and her
car suddenly dies, here are a couple of examples of verb
use:
Passive Structure:
The motor went dead. Sally was scared and her hands were
shaking more than ever as she took her hands off the steering
wheel. Her mind was racing at a dizzying speed so that all she
felt was numb.
This should be a tense scene, but we have 5 passives with only
took a possibly visual act - but not too exciting at that. By
activating the verbs you create the tension we
need:
Active
Structure:
The motor died. Sally’s hands shook as she snatched them off
the wheel in fear. Her mind raced at a dizzying speed as a cold
numbness threatened to steal her
breath.
See how much more intense this feels. We can see every action
listed. The reader feels dizzy right along with Sally. We have
verbs of actions we can see or feel in some way. Readers are
suddenly in the story instead of being told about
it.
Verb activation is probably the most important aspect of
writing in general to create strong scenes. It falls under the
“Show, Don’t Tell” adage presented to most writers early in
their writing. Yet most writers - even though they nod wisely
in agreement, fully understanding the importance in this simple
method of activating verbs to energize their story - still slip
back into the passive was trap as they
write.
So be ruthless! Look with skepticism at every was and were,
seemed and “-ing” word. Replace them with active verbs and
you’ll have a stronger scene.
[http://www.bristolservicesintl.com/writersintl/editing.html]Sandra
E. Haven has had her articles and fiction published in the U.S.
and Europe--from short fiction to human interest articles,
mainstream to genre. Since 1990 she has provided comprehensive
editing services for writers and book publishers, resulting in
publication for numerous authors.
She specializes in comprehensive editing, which includes
content, characterization, plot, tone and
continuity. She
deals in most fiction genres with an emphasis on mysteries,
fantasies, and stories for children as well as memoirs and
personal essays. For more information see
[http://www.bristolservicesintl.com]Bristol Editing
Services
Copyright, Sandra E. Haven
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Sandra_Haven
http://EzineArticles.com/?Active-Verbs-VS-Passive-Verbs-In-Fiction&id=627557
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