Word Choice (wc)/Sentence Fluency (sf)
Writing Ideas
Word Choice
- Strong verbs (bury dead verbs)
- Quality adjectives
- Simile (using words “like” or “as” to compare things: You are as strong as an ox.)
- Metaphor (using words “is”, “are”, “was”, “were”, “am” to compare: You are an ox.)
- Hyphenated-compound words
- Alliteration (Tommy Tunes took ten telephones to Timmy.)
- “ly” words (usually adverbs)
- New words & different words
- Avoid same words over and over
- Description
- Emphasize words (Bold, CAPS, italics, underline, COMBINE)
- Quotation marks around sarcastic/humorous/opposites (Moffatt is so “serious”.)
- Interjections (words of excitement and expression: “Snikes!”)
- Alliteration (Chuck chomped on cheese crackers while checking the chicken.)
- Imagery (Description relating to any of the five senses – vivid, paint-a-picture detail)
- Hyphenated Compound Words (usually writer-created; “ed” or “ing” endings most common)
- Symbolism
- Hyperbole
- Idiom (figure of speech)
- Irony
- Onomatopoeia
- Oxymoron
- Personification
- Stutter Effect (“I have to wi-wi-wipe my tears.”)
- Spelling out words letter-by-letter (“I yelled out, ‘S-T-O-P!’”)
- Leaving out letters in a word with a hyphen – for one or more letters (“Eat more chic-en!”)
- Leaving out letters in a word with an apostrophe – for one or more letters at beginning or end (“We went fishin’ the other day.” - “The girls wanted the boys to send ‘em letters.”)
- Leaving out letters in a word with an apostrophe – for two or more letters in middle of a word (“It was Jared’s b’day yesterday.”)
- Use of the “(s)” concept (A dog(s) got into the garbage cans.)
Sentence Fluency
- Who/which/that (asides)
- Asides (brackets, parenthesis, hyphens, commas)
- Doubles (adjectives, adverbs [ly], verbs, etc.)
- Long sentences (can include compounds, long sentence descriptions, etc.)
- Short sentences
- One-word sentences (opener)
- Compound sentences (comma, semicolon-comma, semicolon)
- Introductory dependent clauses (Idc: although, since, when, if, because); “complex sentence”
- “ing” sentence beginnings (opener)
- VSS (very short sentence – opener)
- Dialogue/conversation (quotes, interrupted quotes, QWAQ [quote within a quote])
- Questions
- Triples (adjectives, adverbs, nouns, sentences, ing words, etc.)
- Avoid same sentence/word beginnings
- Facts/definitions
- Using “themes”/ “wise sayings” (quote opener)
- Ellipsis (…) use
- Slash mark ( / ) use
- Colon to make a point (We had an important date: we went to see the circus.)
- Lists (comma lists or comma-overload semicolon lists)
- List of more than two sentences (maximum of three sentences combined into one) using commas or semicolons