Leauge of Legends is for virgin losers
gay
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

JVL
almost home

blake kathryn
ojovivo
cherry valley forever
noise dept.
$LAYYYTER
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
art blog(derogatory)
Misplaced Lens Cap

#extradirty

@theartofmadeline

Product Placement

oozey mess

Origami Around
NASA
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

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@gameofthrawns
Leauge of Legends is for virgin losers
gay

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wait so has anyone written a noir AU in which âdeliver some scrap metalâ is a euphemism for shooting somebody?
I actually was recently thinking of a whole Mafia/steampunk AU. Wasnât intending on writing anything for it but I guess I can try a short snippet.
You know, it would hurt to write, butâŚ
Iâm kinda feeling a Revolutionary Road Hiccstrid AU?
I understand the appeal of tragic romance stuff but Revolutionary Road was more like just a train wreck of a relationship from beginning to end.
Most stories with a tragic romance might kill it with a single, unfortunate stroke, or perhaps the lovers part with at least an inkling of respect for each other. RR grapples its romance to the ground, beats it just short of death, and then letâs it crawl for a few more seconds to give the victim false hope before finishing it off with the heaviest object it can find nearby.
That movie brutalized my sixth grade heart and mind.
OMFG. If you are an aspiring writer who needs to do any kind of world buildingâŚ
Guys.Â
GUYS.
Someone motivate me to start writing. Please. Please.
What ideas do you have?

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QUOTE PROMPTS
1. âJust because youâve got the emotional range of a teaspoon doesnât mean we all have.â Harry Potter and The Order of Phoenix
2. âMaybe if I loved you less, I might be able to talk about it more.â Emma
3. âI donât want sunbursts or marble halls. I just want you.â Anne of the Island
4. âMy life is a perfect graveyard of buried hopes.â Anne of Green Gables
5. âYou know, the only thing that scares me is that you might love him more than you love me.â Pearl Harbor
6. âI almost did die, you little son-of-a-bitch. And her face was the last thing that went through my mind.â Pearl Harbor
7. âI love you, Gloria! I always have! [awkward pause] Like you love the beach, or a good book, or the beachâŚâ Madagascar 2
8. âI had not known you a month before I felt that you were the last man in the world whom I could ever be prevailed on to marry.â Pride and Prejudice
9. âAll happy families resemble one another, each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.â Anna Karenina
10. âNow tell me, for which of my bad parts didst thou first fall in love with me?â âFor them all together.â Much Ado About Nothing
11. âSuffer love! A good epithet! I do suffer love indeed, for I love thee against my will.â Much Ado About Nothing
12. âMaybe some folks just ainât allowed to have dreams.â Tangled: The Series
13. âMy Father told me once, âIf you see something wrong happening in the world you can either do nothing, or you can do something,â and I already tried ânothingâ.â Wonder Woman
14. âI know you despise me; allow me to say, it is because you do not understand me.â North and South
15. âYou have nice manners for a thief and a liar.â The Hobbit
16. âEven the word hopeless isnât void of hope.â Trollhunters
17. âTen more seconds of my life Iâll never get back again.â Race to the Edge
18. âWeâve lost so much already. I donât want to lose you too.â The Shack
19. âI should have told you every day from the moment I met you: I love you.â Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl
20. âPeople do crazy things when they are in love.â Hercules
21. âIâd rather die tomorrow than live a hundred years without knowing you.â Pocahontas
22. âWhy the change of mind?â âIt was more a change of heart.â Anastasia
23. âI find your lack of faith disturbing.â Star Wars
24. âWhy, you stuck-up, half-witted, scruffy-looking nerf herder!â Empire Strikes Back
25. âYou know, no matter how much we fought, Iâve always hated watching you leave.â The Force Awakens
26. âI need someone to show me my place in all this.â The Last Jedi
27. âYou man, youâre like fucking fearless! And I just⌠I wanna feel that too.â The Disaster Artist
28. âYou have to be the best. You have to be the best you can be. And never give up.â The Disaster Artist
29. âYouâre tearing me apart, Lisa!â The Room
Where would Berk be located?
So I know Berk is located âtwelve days north of Hopeless and a few degrees south of Freezingâ, according to Hiccup.
But where in our world would Berk be located exactly?
Well, my theory is that Berk is a place where it is always unbearably cold where they probably donât have much of a summer. As Hiccup said, 'it snows nine months of the year and hails the other threeâ. If that is the case, them why was Berk seen as fine and sunny in the franchise?
Budget. Yep. The animators probably couldnât afford to animate Berk always raining, which is understandable.
Anyway, I have read analyses that Berk is located somewhere near Norway. Some other people have said it is located in Scotland because of the Vikingsâ thick accents. Others have said other theories,which is interesting.
I donât exactly know where Berk would be located. But since Vikings lived in Northern Europe over 1000 years ago, my guess is Berk would be located near Iceland. It is almost the size of Berk and geographically, it has some similarities.
Also in httyd1, Hiccup mentioned an 'icelandic cowâs when he was feeding Toothless fish while fitting his tail fin.
So Iâm guessing Berk would be located near Iceland. Thatâs my theory.
I want to know what you guys think
My theory is that HTTYD exists on a smaller fantasy Earth which only vaguely mirrors our own and every civilization is a mish-mash of stereotypes.
So youâve got Vikings with Scottish accents and Celtic vibes. What else? Whatever the hell I want:
Italy is a bunch of Renaissance-era city-states but with serious OG Roman Empire vibes.
France is medieval but then goes through an early French Revolution and eventually comes under the iron rule of a cross between Louis XIV and Napoleon.
Germany/Holy Roman Empire is going through some early Thirty Yearsâ War period, with Prussia as the most powerful German kingdom. Prussia of course will be all the good German stuff: Teutonic Knights, regular olâ WW1 Germany, and a dash of WWII Nazis if youâre feeling daring.
Russia is...well Russia is Dragoâs Empire now. Letâs make all of Eastern Europe Dragoâs Empire, and whenever heâs defeated in HTTYD 3 the Empire just fragments into a million pieces.
I can go on. Seeing as how Dragoâs army is already using gunpowder weaponry in HTTYD 2, I sorta like the idea of the HTTYD world being in this late medieval/Renaissance era.
âBut,â one might counter, âthe Viking Age ended way befoââ
I donât give a damn. Gunpowder weaponry is awesome.
some terrible twist endings for HTTYD 3
- Trying too hard to catch the The Shape of Water wave: secretly, Hiccup has been a dragon the entire time. You thought it was a heartwarming story about how humans and dragons could coexist? THINK AGAIN, BITCH. PLASMA BLAST.
- Pulling a Go Set A Watchman: Actually, Hiccup has been EVIL THE WHOLE TIME.
- Pulling an ACTUAL Go Set A Watchman: Hiccup has been a complacent racist fraud the whole time.
- Pulling something similar but even worse: Toothless has been evil the whole time. It was a long con. He did it all for the drug money and heâs not sorry.
- It turns into a very earnest talking-head PSA from Craig Ferguson telling us the real moral of the story is that we should all go vegan.
- Only the first fifteen minutes are the movie and then the rest is just Jonsi openly weeping over the credits.
- Worst Deus Ex Machina ever: Valkaâs Bewilderbeast turns out to still be alive. Itâs bitter. It eats everyone.
- An extremely convoluted message about disability: Toothlessâ tail grows back, like a lizardâs tail.
- An aggressively terrible message about disability: Hiccupâs leg grows back, like a lizardâs tail.
- A horrible queerbaiting catfish situation in which we think weâre about to see Gobber in a canon gay relationship, but his new LDR turns out to be with Grimmel. Itâs messy.
- Some kind of Air Bud tribute in which the fate of the dragons and Vikings alike must be decided in a sudden-death beach volleyball tournament.
- Pulling an Old Yeller: Rabies affects mammals, right? And dragons are reptiles, right? And reptiles canât get rabies? Ergo dragons canât get rabies! Right?! RIGHT?! NO WAIT WHAT ARE YOU DOIâ
- Getting a little too high fantasy and making it expressly clear that the dragons will live on for hundreds of years, and bonding with humans has set them up for centuries of unending grief and loss.
- Hiccup drops everything and admits he was serious about the small home repair thing. The remainder of the film charts his journey to become a successful carpenter. Itâs somehow both a Jesus allegory and a Tim Allen tribute, and not in the good way.
- They pull a Soylent Green and we find out the grisly truth behind why only some of the characters have Scottish accents.
- They pull a C.S. Lewis and everythingâs finally working out for our heroes until they get hit by a train right at the end.
>Pulling a Go Set a Watchmen
More like pulling a Watchmen.
An Ozymandias-type villain is a concept for a superhero AU or just plain evil!Hiccup that I actually sort of want to see.
I was getting pretty fed up with links and generators with very general and overused weapons and superpowers and what have you for characters so:
Here is a page for premodern weapons, broken down into a ton of subcategories, with the weaponâs region of origin.Â
Here is a page of medieval weapons.
Here is a page of just about every conceived superpower.
Here is a page for legendary creatures and their regions of origin.
Here are some gemstones.
Here is a bunch of Greek legends, including monsters, gods, nymphs, heroes, and so on.Â
Here is a website with a ton of (legally attained, donât worry) information about the black market.
Here is a website with information about forensic science and cases of death. Discretion advised.Â
Here is every religion in the world.Â
Here is every language in the world.
Here are methods of torture. Discretion advised.
Here are descriptions of the various methods used for the death penalty. Discretion advised.
Here are poisonous plants.
Here are plants in general.
Feel free to add more to this!
An exceedingly useful list of lists for writers.
Hey guys! As a writer myself, itâs hard to have a lot of resources for writing in one place. Thatâs why I decided to create this masterpost, and maybe make more if I find future resources. I hope you like it, and expect to see more masterposts like this in the future!
Generators
Character
Appearance Generator
Archetypes Generator
Character Generator
Character Traits Generator
Family Generator
Job/Occupation Generator, (II)
Love Interest Generator
Motive Generator
Name Generator
Personality Generator, (II)
Quick Character Generator
Super Powers Generator
Names
Brand Name Generator
Medicine Title Generator
Name Generator
Quick Name Generator
Vehicle Generator
Town Name Generator
Plot
First Encounter Generator
First Line Generator, (II)
Plot Generator, (II), (III)
Plot Device Generator
Plot Twist Generator
Quick Plot Generator
Setting/World-Building
City Generator
Fantasy Race Generator
Laws Generator
Pet Generator
Setting Generator
Species Generator
Terrain Generator
Prompts
Subject Generator
âTake Three Nounsâ Generator
Word Prompt Generator
Misc
Color Generator
Decision Generator
Dialogue Generator
Journey Generator
Title Generator, (II), (III)
Some Tips
Just a few I found from the writing tips tag!
Writing action / @berrybird
How to create a strong voice in your writing / @collegerefs
How to plot a complex novel in one day! / @lizard-is-writing
8 ways to get past writerâs block / @kiramartinauthor
psa for writers / @dasakuryo
âWrite Using Your 5 Sensesâ / @ambientwriting
How People Watching Improves Your Writing / @wherethetransthingsare
Writing Science Fiction: Tips for Beginners / @fictionwritingtips
Creating Likeable Characters / @authors-haven
Vocabulary
Descriptive words / @somekindofstudent
Words to replace âSaidâ / @msocasey
Obscure color words / @mintsteelpeachlilac
Words to spice up your stories / @busyibee
Words to describe someoneâs voice
Words to Use Instead of Very / @gaybybirth
Touchy Feely Words / @gaybybirth
Some Advice
Stephen Kingâs Top 20 Rules for Writers
âBut my plot isnât UNIQUE or BIG enough!â / @youreallwrite
8 Things Every Creative Should Know / @adamjk
(How To) Get Over Comparing Yourself to Other Creatives / @adamjk
How to Get Over Common Creative Fears (Maybe)Â / @adamjk
14 Tips From Stephen King On Writing / @i-can-give-you-prompts
Playlists
Electronic Thoughts / @eruditekid
âMix About Writingâ An Instrumental Mix / @shadowofemirates
Shut Up, Iâm Writing! / @ninadropdead
Chill / @endlessreveries
Breathtaking Film Scores /Â @tweedskirts
Music to Write to Vol. 1: Starlight / @crestadeen
Music for Written Words / @ghoulpatch
Dead Men Tell No Tales / @scamandersnewt
Fatale / @dolcegf
All These Things that Iâve Done / @referenceforwriters
Feeling Soaking into Your Bones / @verylondon
I Can Feel Your Pulse in the Pages / @rphelper
Morally Ambiguous / @scamandersnewt
Wonderwall / @wheelerwrites
Pythia / @mazikeene
Ballet: To Dance / @tanaquil
Websites and Apps
For Writing
ZenPen: A minimalist writing website to keep you free of distractions and in the flow.
The Most Dangerous Writing App: A website where you have to keep typing or all of your writing will be lost. It helps you keep writingâŚkind of. You can choose between a time or word count limit!
Evernote: An online website where you can take notes and save the product to your laptop and/or smartphone!
Writer, the Internet Typewriter: Itâs just you and your writing, and you can save your product on the website if you create an account.
Wordcounter: A website to help check your word and character count, and shows words youâre using frequently.
Monospace: An Android app for writing on the go when you feel the inspiration, but you donât have your laptop on you!
For Productivity
Tide: An app that combines a pomodoro-esque timer with nature sounds and other noises! (Google Play / Apple Store)
ClearFocus: An Android app with a pomodoro-type time counter to let you concentrate easier and stay productive.
Forest: An app with a time counter to keep you focused and off your phone, and when you complete the time limit, a tree grows in your garden! (Google Play / Apple Store)
SelfControl: A Mac downloadable app that blocks you from distracting mail servers, websites, and other things!
Prompt Blogs
@writeworld
@dialouge-prompts
@oopsprompts
@prompts-for-the-otp
@creativepromptsforwriting
@the-modern-typewriter
@theprofessionalpromptmaker
@writers-are-writers
@otp-imagines-cult
@witterprompts
@havetobememes
@auideas
@putthepromptsonpaper
@promptsonpaper
@fyotpprompts
@otpisms
@soprompt
@otpprompts
@ablockforwritersblock
@awritersnook
Writing Tips Blogs
@writeworld
@anomalously-written
@awritersnook
@clevergirlhelps
@referenceforwriters
@whataboutwriting
@thewritershelpers
@nimblesnotebook
@slitheringink
Reblogging to save a writer
Hey fellow writers! Enjoy!

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Tagged by @athingofvikingsâ
THE STORIES
1. Which is the fic youâre most proud of?
I guess...Viking War Tales, by virtue of putting it out there and not completely sucking.
2. Which is your least favorite?
I did this Character Scramble thing on r/whowouldwin that was annoying because I got Skeletor as a character on my team and honestly I was not in the mood to write Skeletor. Dropped after Round 1.
3. If you were to recommend one to read to your mom?
Funny, she sometimes says she wants to read what I write.Â
None.
4. Which one would you consider re-writing?
Book of Blood, my âATLA BUT WITH MUH EDGEâ fic. I got only like two or three reviews and they were all like, âYeah this is too much just a copy+paste of Book 1âł and I was like, âShit, I agree, it fucking sucksâ and I stopped writing. I still like the idea of a darker ATLA, if only to satisfy my seemingly endless desire for grimdark and spilled blood whenever I think of fanfic ideas. I swear Iâm not actually like this most of the time, just with fanfics.
5. Biggest regret in a fic?
Every time I do a writingprompt thing on Reddit and it gets like two fucking upvotes.
The amount of time I sunk into Bloodmatches on r/whowouldwin only to have mine be the only comment. Lame. I think that might actually be why I got a ff.net account and a Tumblr.
6. Biggest success with a fic?
Viking War Tales, by virtue of...yeah, I only have two published things on ff.net.
7. Your fic with the most notes?
...Viking War Tales.
8. Your fic with the least notes?
Any of the many unpublished random things I have stored on my laptop. Do those count?
9. What do you think makes a good fic? Tips?
Good prose, whatever the hell that means. You can have the most ridiculous shit plot, but if I think that your narration flows like water and your dialogue sings, Iâll eat that shit up off the fucking floor.
10. Whenâs the next update on your works?
Sometime between now and whenever the first human lands on Mars.
11. Number of followers before you started writing and after?
I have no idea. Â
THE WRITER
1. Which character do you love writing for?
Grand Admiral Thrawn of Star Wars old EU (best EU) lore is fun because heâs a Villain Sue and I ainât gotta explain shit behind his convoluted plans that just so happen to work.
Astrid Hofferson is good because HTTYD honestly doesnât do the best job of fleshing her out, which lets me kinda imprint whatever the hell I want on her character to some extent. I find Astrid the most enjoyable to write when sheâs pissed off and/or when sheâs cleaving through a person in two with an axe. I like the idea that thereâs this arrogance deep within Astrid that has her believe in her inherent superiority: the natural superiority of Vikings over outsiders, of Berkians over other Vikings, and of course of her over most other Berkians.
2. Which character do you dislike writing for?
Skeletor, I guess, as I discovered from Character Scramble. I canât take a Saturday morning villain like him seriously. Some baddie who calls others nicompoops? Fuck off with that shit.Â
Aside from him, I donât know.
3. Whatâs your favorite AU to write for?
No idea, havenât tried it. Probably something involving sci-fi and war.
4. Whatâs your least favorite AU to write for?
Again, no idea.
5. What do you hope never gets requested?
I dunno, I donât think Iâve gotten enough requests to really think about this question.
6. What do you wish was requested more?
Combat stuff. Honestly, I have two requests like that for Viking War Tales from waaay back that I have yet to complete. Big sorry.
7. Thoughts on writing Smut/POC/Curvy/MxM/FxF?
Smut is too intimate for my cold, cold heart to write well.
For POC, I just do it. Especially for something like ATLA or Star Wars. Just makes sense to me. I guess when writing HTTYD which is a pretty pasty-white universe I donât have a lot of POC characters because, well, I donât do a lot of OC stuff, but still, in this fic Iâm messing around with I do have a scholar coming all the way up from Muslim North Africa. Or something.
Fishlegs is curvy. Iâve written Fishlegs. So yeah, sure, curvy is okay?
Have I written any LGBT characters? Hmmm, I honestly donât remember. In the fic Iâm working on I do have at least one or two.
8. Which account is your biggest inspiration in writing?
On Tumblr? @howtofightwrite is pretty cool.
9. How long have you been a fic writer for?
I only started publishing anything I wrote on an actual fanfic site like...two years ago? Iâve been writing random little things longer than that, though.
10. Any upcoming secret works?
As mentioned before I am working on something. Itâll probably come out within the next century, I promise.
I tag no one because thatâs too much work, and Iâm a busy boy.
CHARACTER FACIAL EXPRESSIONS (WRITING REFERENCE)
EYES/BROWS
his eyes widened
her eyes went round
her eyelids drooped
his eyes narrowed
his eyes lit up
his eyes darted
he squinted
she blinked
her eyes twinkled
his eyes gleamed
her eyes sparkled
his eyes flashed
his eyes glinted
his eyes burned withâŚ
her eyes blazed withâŚ
her eyes sparked withâŚ
her eyes flickered withâŚ
_____ glowed in his eyes
the corners of his eyes crinkled
she rolled her eyes
he looked heavenward
she glanced up to the ceiling
she winked
tears filled her eyes
his eyes welled up
her eyes swam with tears
his eyes flooded with tears
her eyes were wet
his eyes glistened
tears shimmered in her eyes
tears shone in his eyes
her eyes were glossy
he was fighting back tears
tears ran down her cheeks
his eyes closed
she squeezed her eyes shut
he shut his eyes
his lashes fluttered
she batted her lashes
his brows knitted
her forehead creased
his forehead furrowed
her forehead puckered
a line appeared between her brows
his brows drew together
her brows snapped together
his eyebrows rose
she raised a brow
he lifted an eyebrow
his eyebrows waggled
she gave him a once-over
he sized her up
her eyes bored into him
she took in the sight ofâŚ
he glared
she peered
he gazed
she glanced
he stared
she scrutinized
he studied
she gaped
he observed
she surveyed
he gawked
he leered
his pupils (were) dilated
her pupils were huge
his pupils flared
NOSE
her nose crinkled
his nose wrinkled
she sneered
his nostrils flared
she stuck her nose in the air
he sniffed
she sniffled
MOUTH
she smiled
he smirked
she grinned
he simpered
she beamed
her mouth curved into a smile
the corners of his mouth turned up
the corner of her mouth quirked up
a corner of his mouth lifted
his mouth twitched
he gave a half-smile
she gave a lopsided grin
his mouth twisted
he plastered a smile on his face
she forced a smile
he faked a smile
her smile faded
his smile slipped
he pursed his lips
she pouted
his mouth snapped shut
her mouth set in a hard line
he pressed his lips together
she bit her lip
he drew his lower lip between his teeth
she nibbled on her bottom lip
he chewed on his bottom lip
his jaw set
her jaw clenched
his jaw tightened
a muscle in her jaw twitched
he ground his jaw
he snarled/his lips drew back in a snarl
her mouth fell open
his jaw dropped
her jaw went slack
he gritted his teeth
she gnashed her teeth
her lower lip trembled
his lower lip quivered
SKIN
she paled
he blanched
she went white
the color drained out of his face
his face reddened
her cheeks turned pink
his face flushed
she blushed
he turned red
she turned scarlet
he turned crimson
a flush crept up her face
WHOLE FACE, ETC.
he screwed up his face
she scrunched up her face
he grimaced
she winced
she gave him a dirty look
he frowned
she scowled
he glowered
her whole face lit up
she brightened
his face went blank
her face contorted
his face twisted
her expression closed up
his expression dulled
her expression hardened
she went poker-faced
a vein popped out in his neck
awe transformed his face
fear crossed her face
sadness clouded his features
terror overtook his face
recognition dawned on her face
SOURCE
Writing Tip June 4th
A list of body language phrases.
Iâve included a very comprehensive list, organized by the type of body movement, hand and arm movements, facial expressions etc. In some cases, a phrase fits more than one heading, so it may appear twice. Possible emotions are given after each BL phrase unless the emotion is indicated within the phrase. (They are underlined for emphasis, not due to a hyperlink.)
Note: Iâve included a few body postures and body conditions as they are non-verbal testimony to the characterâs physical condition.
Have fun and generate your own ideas.:-)
Eyes, Brows and Forehead
arched a sly brow: Â sly, haughty
blinked owlishly: Â just waking, focusing, needs glasses
brows bumped together in a scowl: Â worried, disapproving, irritated
brows knitted in a frown: worried, disapproval, thoughtful
bug-eyed: Â surprised, fear, horror
cocky wink and confident smile: Â over confidence, arrogant, good humor, sexy humor
eyes burned with hatred: besides hatred this might suggest maniacal feelings
eyes flashed: fury, defiance, lust, promise, seduction
eyes rolled skyward: disbelief, distrust, humor
forehead puckered: Â thoughtful, worried, irritation
frustration crinkled her eyes
gaze dipped to her dĂŠcolletage: sexual interest, attraction, lust
gimlet-eyed/narrowed eyes: irritation, thoughtful, mean, angry
gleam of deviltry: Â humor, conniving, cunning
kept eye contact but her gaze became glazed: pretending interest where there is none/bordom
narrowed to crinkled slits: Â angry, distrust
nystagmic eyes missed nothing (constantly shifting eyes): Â Shifty
pupils dilated: Â interested, attraction to opposite sex, fear
raked her with freezing contempt
slammed his eyes shut: Â stunned, furious, pain
squinted in a furtive manner: Â fearful, sneaky
stared with cow eyes: Â surprised, disbelief, hopeful, lovestruck
subtle wink: Â sexy, humor/sharing a joke, sarcasm
unrelenting stare: distrust, demanding, high interest, unyielding
Place To Place, Stationary Or Posture
ambled away: Â relaxed, lazy
barged ahead: Â rude, hurried
battled his way through the melee: Â desperate, anger, alarm
cruised into the diner: Â easy-going, feeling dapper, confident
dawdled alongside the road: Â lazy, deliberate delay for motives, unhurried, relaxed
dragged his blanket in the dirt: Â sadness/depressed, weary
edged closer to him: Â sneaky, seeking comfort, seeking protection, seeking an audience
he stood straighter and straightened his tie: Â sudden interest, sexual attraction
held his crotch and danced a frantic jig: demonstrates physical condition â he has to pee
hips rolled and undulated: Â sexy walk, exaggerating for sex appeal
hovered over them with malice/like a threatening storm: here itâs malice, but one may hover for many reasons.
hunched over to look shorter: Â appear inconspicuous, ashamed of actions, ashamed of height
leaped into action feet hammering the marbled floor: Â eager, fear, joyous
long-legged strides: Â hurried, impatient
lumbered across: Â heavy steps of a big man in a hurry
minced her way up to him: timid, sneaky, insecure, dainty or pretense at dainty
paced/prowled the halls: Â worried, worried impatience, impatient, diligently seeking pivoted on his heel and took off: Â mistaken and changes direction, following orders, hurried, abrupt change of mind, angry retreat
plodded down the road: Â unhurried, burdened, reluctant
practiced sensual stroll: Â sexy, showing off
rammed her bare foot into her jeans: angry, rushed
rocked back and forth on his heels: thoughtful, impatiently waiting
sagged against the wall: Â exhausted, disappointment
sallied forth: Â confident, determined
sashayed her cute little fanny: Â confident, determined, angered and determined
shrank into the angry crowd: Â fear, insecure, seeking to elude
sketched a brief bow and assumed a regal pose: confident, mocking, snooty, arrogant skidded to an abrupt halt: change of heart, fear, surprise, shock
skulked on the edges of the crowd: sneaky, ashamed, timid
slithered through the door: Â sneaky, evil, bad intentions
stormed toward her, pulling up short when: anger with a sudden surprise
swaggered into the class room: Â over confident, proud, arrogant, conceited
tall erect posture: Â confidence, military bearing
toe tapped a staccato rhythm: Â impatience, irritation
tottered/staggered unsteadily then keeled over: Â drunk, drugged, aged, ill
waltzed across the floor: Â happy, blissful, exuberant, conceited, arrogant
Head Movement
cocked his head: Â curiosity, smart-alecky, wondering, thoughtful
cocked his head left and rolled his eyes to right corner of the ceiling: Â introspection
droop of his head: depressed, downcast, hiding true feelings
nodded vigorously: eager
tilted her head to one side while listening: Â extreme interest, possibly sexual interest
Mouth And Jaw
a lackluster smile: Â feigning cheerfulness
cigarette hung immobile in mouth: shock, lazy, uncaring, relaxed casualness
clinched his jaw at the sight: Â angered, worried, surprised
curled her lips with icy contempt
expelled her breath in a whose: Â relief, disappointment
gagged at the smell: disgust, distaste
gapped mouth stare: Â surprised, shock, disbelief
gritted his teeth: Â anger, irritation, holding back opinion
inhaled a sharp breath: Â surprise, shock, fear, horror
licked her lips: Â nervous, sexual attraction
lips primed: affronted, upset, insulted
lips pursed for a juicy kiss
lips pursed like sheâd been chewing a lemon rind: dislike, angry, irritated, sarcasm
lips screwed into: irritation, anger, grimace, scorn
lips set in a grim line: sorrow, worried, fear of the worst
pursed her lips: Â perturbed, waiting for a kiss
scarfed down the last biscuit: Â physical hunger, greed
slack-mouthed: Â total shock, disbelief
slow and sexy smile: Â attraction, seductive, coy
smacked his lips: anticipation
smile congealed then melted into horror
smile dangled on the corner of his lips: cocky, sexy
smirked and tossed her hair over her shoulder: Â conceit, sarcasm, over confident
sneered and flicked lint off his suit: sarcasm, conceit
spewed water and spit: shock
stuck out her tongue: humor, sarcasm, teasing, childish
toothy smile: Â eagerness, hopeful
wary smile surfaced on her lips
Nose
nose wrinkled in distaste/at the aroma
nostrils flared: Â anger, sexual attraction
nose in the air: Â snooty, haughty
Face in General
crimson with fury
handed it over shame-faced
jutted his chin: confident, anger, forceful
managed a deadpan expression: Â expressionless
muscles in her face tightened: Â unsmiling, concealing emotions, anger, worried
rested his chin in his palm and looked thoughtful
rubbed a hand over his dark stubble: Â thoughtful, ashamed of his appearance
screwed up her face: Â anger, smiling, ready to cry, could almost be any emotion
sneered and flicked lint off his suit: conceit, derision, scorn
Arm and Hand
a vicious yank
arm curled around her waist, tugging her next to him: Â possessive, pride, protective
bit her lip and glanced away: Â shy, ashamed, insecure
brandished his fist: Â anger, threatening, ready to fight, confident, show of pride
clamped his fingers into tender flesh: Â anger, protective, wants to inflict pain
clenched his dirty little fists: stubborn, angry
clapped her hands on her hips, arms crooked like sugar bowel handles: Â anger, demanding, disbelief
constantly twirled her hair and tucked it behind her ear: Â attracted to the opposite sex, shy crossed his arms over his chest: waiting, impatient, putting a barrier
crushed the paper in his fist: Â anger, surrender, discard
dived into the food: hunger, eager, greedy
doffed his hat: Â polite gesture, mocking, teasing
doodled on the phone pad and tapped the air with her foot: Â bored, inattention, introspection
drummed her fingers on the desk: Â impatient, frustrated, bored
fanned her heated face with her hands: physically hot, embarrassed, indicating attraction
fiddled with his keys: nervous, bored
firm, palm to palm hand shake: Â confident, honest
flipped him the bird: sarcastic discard
forked his fingers through his hair for the third time: Â disquiet/consternation, worry, thoughtful
handed it over shame-faced: Â guilt, shame
held his crotch and danced a frantic jig: Â physical need to relieve himself
limp hand shake: Â lack of confidence, lack of enthusiasm
propped his elbow on his knee: relaxed, thoughtful
punched her pillow: Â restless, canât sleep, angry
rested his chin in his palm: Â thoughful, worried
scratched his hairy belly and yawned: Â indolent, bored, lazy, relaxed, just waking
shoulders lifted in a shrug: Â doubtful, careless discard
slapped his face in front of God and country: Â enraged, affronted/insulted
snapped a sharp salute: Â respect, sarcastic gesture meaning the opposite of respect
snapped his fingers, expecting service: Â arrogant, lack of respect, self-centered
sneered and flicked lint off his suit
spread her arms wide: welcoming, Â joy, love
stabbed at the food: anger, hunger, determined
stood straighter and smoothed his tie: Â sudden interest, possible sexual interest
stuffed his hands in his pockets: self-conscious, throwing up a barrier
sweaty handshake: Â nervous, fearful
touched his arm several times while explaining: Â sign of attraction, flattery, possessive
wide sweep of his arms: Â welcoming, all inclusive gesture, horror
Sitting or Rising
collapsed in a stupor: Â exhausted, drunk, drugged, disbelief
enthroned himself at the desk: Â conceit, pronouncing or taking ownership
exploded out of the chair: Â shock, eager, anger, supreme joy
roosted on the porch rail like a cock on a hen house roof: Â claiming ownership, conceit, content
sat, squaring an ankle over one knee: Â relaxed and open
slouched/wilted in a chair and paid languid attention to: Â drowsy, lazy, depressed, disinterest, sad, totally relaxed, disrespectful
squirmed in his chair: ill at ease, nervous, needs the bathroom
Recline
flung himself into the bed: sad, depressed, exhausted, happy
prostrated himself: surrender, desperate, miserable, powerless, obsequious, fawning, flattering
punched her pillow: Â canât sleep, anger, frustrated
threw himself on the floor kicking and screaming: tantrum
Entire body and General
body stiffened at the remark: Â offended, anger, alerted
body swayed to music: Â dreamy, fond memories, enjoys the music
bounced in the car seat, pointing: Â excitement, fear, eager
cowered behind his brother: Â fear, shyness, coward, desperate
curled into a ball: Â sorrow, fear, sleepy, defensive
heart galloping: Â anxiety, joy, eager
held his crotch and danced a frantic jig
humped over his cane, each step shaking and careful: pain, aged
inhaled a deep breath and blew out slowly: buying time to find words/thoughtful, reconciled
quick and jerky like rusty cogs on a wheel: Â unsure of actions, self-conscious, tense, edgy
rocked back and forth on his heels: Â impatient, cocky, gleeful
manhandled the woman into a corner: Â bully, anger
slumped shoulders: defeat, depressed, sad, surrender
stiff-backed: Â priggish, haughty, affronted
stood straighter and straightened his tie: Â sexual interest, wants to make an impression
stooped and bent: aged, arthritic, in pain
stretched extravagantly and yawned: Â tired, bored, unconcerned
sweating uncontrollably: nervous, fear, guilt
tall erect posture: Â confidence, military bearing
was panting now at: Â afraid, exhausted, out of breath, sexual excitement
-Sharla Rae
So, so many works Iâve read could be vastly improved with tightening and shaving of superfluous words. Wordiness is an easy stumbling block, as weâre used to how we talk. Weâre used to how others (long ago) wrote. But times change, my friend, and so do expectations of the writer. We donât get paid by the word in fiction. So show your smarts and say as much as you can with as much power as you can in as few words as possible.
Here are a few things you can cut without reserve to help shorten your story right now. And as you catch yourself using these words in your next draft, hit that backspace before you finish the sentence! Itâs okay if you already have. You can go delete them now. No one will ever know.
Moment/Second/Minute
Itâs so tempting. I am guilty of using this word like fertilizer in my first drafts. But most of the time, these words arenât needed at all. They add nothing.
He sat down for a moment, sipping his coffee. vs. He sat down and sipped at his coffee.
But he only did it for a moment, you say!
He sat down for a moment, sipping his coffee. When the door opened a second later, he shot to his feet. vs. He sat down and sipped his coffee. The door opened, and before he could swallow his first sip, he shot to his feet.
I know, this is about making your writing more concise and my ârightâ example has more words than the first example. But whatâs the difference? The words used in the second sentence are more tangible. They give a visual that âa second laterâ and âfor a momentâ donât. And you could leave that part out, of course, if youâre really going for trimming word count. It doesnât paint quite the same image, but âThe door opened and he shot to his feet.â is a perfectly good sentence.
Suddenly/All of a sudden
Youâve heard this one, before, surely. These words are usedâŚwhen? When youâre trying to portray suddenness. Surprise, perhaps. So why are you adding in extra words to slow down the pace?
She flipped on the TV and reclined in her chair. All of sudden, the TV flashed a bright light and the power went out. vs. She flipped on the TV and reclined in her chair. The TV flashed once before the lights went dark. The power was out.
That sense of immediacy is felt when stuff just happens. So let it happen. If itâs rhythm youâre worried about, then find more useful words to create the rhythm. Notice that I didnât just cut âAll of a suddenâ out of the sentence and leave it. I reworded it a bit to make it stronger.
Finally
It can be a useful word, but more often than not, itâs just taking up space.
Really/Very
JustâŚdelete them.
To alter a Mark Twain quote:
âSubstitute â[fucking]â every time youâre inclined to write âvery;â your editor will delete it and the writing will be just as it should be.â
But seriously, if youâre saying, âShe was breathing very hard.â You could just cut the âveryâ and say, âShe was breathing hard.â Or, even better, âShe was panting.â Or, EVEN BETTER: âShe panted.â
Himself/herself/myself/themselves
Reflexive nouns have a specific purpose, though they can still often be avoided. They fall into the category of âuse only when itâs confusing otherwise.â
Correct: He looked at himself in the mirror. Better: He looked in the mirror.
Incorrect: She gave them to Andrew and myself before leaving. Correct: She gave them to Andrew and me before leaving.
Technically correct I guess: I havenât eaten lunch myself. (Intensive pronoun; aka waste of words) Better: I havenât eaten lunch.
Intensive pronouns add emphasis, but that emphasis is negligible and often negated by the power of tightening your narrative.
That
You can likely cut 60% of your âthat"s and your story will be unaffected. Sometimes, you do need to add a âthatâ here and there for clarification, but not always. And sometimes itâs just plain incorrect.
The jacket was the coolest one that heâd ever owned. vs. The jacket was the coolest one heâd ever owned.
In other cases, you might do well to substitute âthatâ with âwhich.â Though, if youâre doing this, make sure you do it properly. That change can often alter the meaning of your sentence. That can be for the better, though.
The vandalism that read âBad Wolfâ made Rose nervous. vs. The vandalism, which read âBad Wolf,â made Rose nervous.
Do you see the difference? In the first sentence, the words are what make Rose nervous. In the second, the vandalism itself makes Rose nervous, and it happens to say âBad Wolf.â In this case, if youâve watched Doctor Who, then you know the first example is the correct one.
So when youâre sharing details using âthatâ or âwhich,â contemplate how important they are to meaning of the sentence to determine which type of clause you need to use.
Then
Or worse, âAnd then.â
It makes your writing sound a bit juvenile. Either cut it entirely, or substitute âand.â
She jumped into the pool, then hit her head on the bottom. vs. She jumped into the pool and hit her head on the bottom.
And then, after all that time, she fell asleep. vs. After all that time, she fell asleep.
Even
Sometime âevenâ can help emphasize a situation or behavior, but when itâs used in narrative improperly, it sounds childish and silly.
He couldnât even breathe. vs. He couldnât breathe.
Even with the new hair gel, his hair was terrible. (This one is fine, though you could still cut that âevenâ if you really wanted toâŚ)
Just
JustâŚDelete it.
Breathe/breath/exhale/inhale/sigh/nod/shrug
Another one Iâm so guilty of. In my first drafts, I tend to talk about how a character is breathing, or when theyâre sighing like nobodyâs business. I know a lot of writers who are guilty of this, too. Itâs a great tool to use scarcely. In intense moments, you can let your character take a final deep breath to calm themselves. When a character almost drowns, those first few sweet breaths are important. But you readers know that people breath all the time. And just because you need a beat in your dialogue doesnât mean you need to remind your reader that the character is still breathing or moving.
Rather/quite/somewhat
She was rather tall. She was tall. He was quite idiotic. He was idiotic. They were somewhat snazzy. They were snazzy. Why do you need those words? Kill âem.
Start/begin
This is a great example of fluff.
She started to run toward the shop. vs. She ran toward the shop.
He began scolding them for their performance. vs. He scolded them for their performance.
There are obviously uses for this word, like anything. He started the car. Begin your tests! But when youâre using it to slow the action and the pace of your narrative, then consider heavily if you need it. You probably donât.
In order to/in an attempt to
Phrases that add unneeded complications, cumbersome wordingâŚkill âem!
She bit down in an attempt to stop herself from screaming. vs. She bit down to stop herself from screaming.
Was able to
He was able to call. vs. He could call. OR He called.
This is one that isnât inherently bad, but it can easily be overused and cutting it will help simplify your narrative.
Due to
Ugh. Are you trying to sound proper and stuffy? Because thatâs a reason, I guess, to use this phraseâŚand yet it sounds like doodoo. (Yes. Iâm an adult.) Rephrase. Use âBecause ofâ or just avoid the need altogether.
We stopped due to traffic. vs. We stopped because of traffic. OR (Strength of narrative!) We stopped mid-highway. The parked cars went on beyond the curve of the road, out of sight.
Visibly/obviously/apparently/audibly
These are a sign of telling in your narrative when you should probably be showing.
She was visibly shaking. â> She shivered, hugging her upper arms. He was obviously tired. â> He yawned and tripped on his own feet as he crossed the room. They were apparently angry. â> They stomped and shouted, demanding attention. She screamed audibly. (Really?) â> She screamed.
Donât tell your readers what emotion a character is feeling. Instead, give a few clues that they can see/hear/feel the emotion too.
While
This word has lots of legitimate uses. However, if youâre using it poorly, then your narrative reads like an Early Readerâs book, and you (unless thatâs what youâre writing) probably donât want that.
âGet it together,â he said while flipping them off. vs. âGet it together,â he said, flipping them off.
Turned
One of the classics. So overused, my friends. Itâs needed on occasion, but not nearly as often as we use it. Just cut it out.
They turned toward her as they spoke. vs. They gave her their full attention as they spoke. OR They looked into her eyes. OR (Nothing. Readers donât have to be updated on every little movement.)
Saw/looked/regarded
UGH. Regarded:Looked::Mentioned:Said
And, like âsaid,â many, many instances of these words can be nixed.
She saw them run for the hills. vs. They ran for the hills.
This can be tricky, I know, when youâre writing in limited-third or first POV. Itâs tempting to put every action directly through your POV characterâs filter. But resist that temptation! There are times when itâs appropriate, occasionally, but it can be overdone so easily.
I looked at her and said, âPlease.â vs. I said,â Please.â OR. I took her hand. âPlease.â
This example sides with the breathing and the turning. Itâs often an unneeded update on the tiny movements of the characters. And, again, sometimes you need that beat or that little detail in an intense moment, but not often.
Said/replied/stated/spoke/mentioned/asked/commented/yelled/cried/shouted
Iâm not here to tell you to cut all your dialogue tags (please donât). Iâm also going to the last person who insists you get rid of âsaid.â In fact, Iâm in the âsaid is invisibleâ party of writing nerds and I think, if youâre going to use a standard tag, it should be âsaidâ 90% of the time.Â
But aside from that, using as few dialogue tags as possible is a good thing. Iâll do a full post on this soon, but for now, be aware of how often you rely on these words in your dialogue and do your best not to overuse them. Use surrounding action and context to take some of the reliance off of these words.Â
To-Be in all its conjugated forms
If youâre using any of this list:
am, is, are, was, were, be, being, had been
Then check yo'self. Some tenses call for an auxiliary verb. Some types of sentence do, too, not doubt about it. But many donât, and cutting to-be verbs when you can will help tighten your writing.
We were going to the store. vs. We went to the store.
Sounds were echoing through the chamber. vs. Sounds echoed through the chamber.
To-be verbs can also be an indicator of passive voice, though they arenât always.
He was hit by the ball. vs. The ball hit him.
Last but not least, check all of your adverbs.
Chances are, if youâre using an adverb, you could be using a single strong verb instead and giving each sentence more punch.
He ran quickly. â> He sprinted. I hit him hard. â> I socked him. She spoke quietly. â> She whispered. They ran into each other fast. â> They crashed.
So what am I supposed to do about this?
Take it to heart. Try not to let these words take over your brain as you write. Once your manuscript is finished, try this method:
Use Find and Replace. Replace any and all of the aforementioned words in ALL-CAPS. Now, if youâve paid attention to my advice in using emphasis, then those all-caps will really stick out as youâre reading over your work and you can decide at each instance whether your usage is appropriate, or if it needs to be rewritten. As I did to this very old draft of mine from my first NaNoWriMo (in which I used every single word on this list, Iâm sure).
When I used this method with my most recent WIP, I was able to cut my word count from 105k to 93k without cutting any content whatsoever. It takes a lot of work and itâs pretty tedious but the results are amazing!
It wouldnât be the English language without exceptions, would it?
Now, there is actually an important time for intentionally using any or all of the words on this list. You know when that is?
When it fits the characterâs voice. - More on this in my next post!
Reblogging for reference
Ok, so, Starcraft 2 is free to play now, and I decided to give it a go, and I have a question:
Are there no heroes in this game?
Iâve played a couple of versus matches against the CPU, and if thereâs a way to get a hero, I donât see it. The coop mode seems to have them, I havenât tried it yet, but Iâm talking about the regular game.
If thereâs no heroes like there are in Warcraft 3, this makes Starcraft 2 massively inferior to Warcraft 3.
For example, just playing with humans in Warcraft 3:
If you picked the paladin, you would be able to heal units, nuke undeads and have a great support role where massing a lot of weaker units would be viable because the paladinâs aura would give them a lot of extra armor and you could mass revive, as such, your units are more disposable.
If you picked the archmage, you would be able to regen mana fast for yourself and allied units, youâd have a good AOE attack and mass teleport your army for sneak attacks. Youâd focus on fewer strong units that hold out the enemy while you kill them, spellcasters that constantly cast buffs/debuffs/heal since youâre regenerating mana and ambush bases when the enemy isnât in them.
What hero you picked in Warcraft 3 changed a lot about how youâd play, even just using the same race all the time still gave you variety. Not seeing any of that in Starcraft 2.
Shitâs already kinda dull to be honest.
I'd say it's a bit unfair to peg Starcraft 2 as "vastly inferior" to Warcraft 3 just because it has no heroes. SC2's certainly a different flavor of RTS.Â
I think WC3 was very much designed around the hero system, with relatively beefy units and heroes giving time for a lot of micro, and the Upkeep system discouraging players from fielding very large armies too quickly. You want to protect the hero so it could level up. Starcraft, on the other hand, is much more frenetic with no Upkeep and a damage/HP ratio that results in units dying very quickly compared to WC3, encouraging rapidly building armies and throwing them into the meatgrinder (whether as a big deathball or in engagements across the map). Without heroes, out-pacing the enemy in economy/production becomes much more vital as thereâs no single unit (or just beefier units in general) that can help hold the line or delay or turn the tide as soon as it gets pumped out.

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Am I the only one disappointed in Thrawn as portrayed on Rebels, compared to Thrawn from the EU? On Rebels he seems to get clowned by Ezra and company quite often. He doesnât seem the almost unstoppable strategist as which he was written by Zahn. Also, I find his voice annoying. For someone constantly getting embarrassed by the Rebels, he sounds awfully bored. Almost monotone.
Youâre not alone. I could write a lot about what I donât like about Thrawn in Rebels and how different (for the worse) he is compared to not only his Legends version but even the canon novel meant to tie into the show. The novel, of course, was written by Zahn.
Losing to the Ghost crew isnât the problem for me, or at least not the biggest one. Itâs how he loses and even how he wins that really makes me feel heâs been wasted on a kids show.
General Hoff in buisness đĽ
This is super lit but...what is she holding?