Every Word Matters, Revising Your Picture Book Manuscript Part C

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Verbs: are they active, strong, and precise. Are they dull or over-used words?

  • Do they support the themes you are exploring?
  • Do they convey physical and emotional qualities?
  • Replace modifiers (adjective and adverse) with strong verbs that have physical and emotional meaning in addition to action. Example: he went home.
  • An adverb is needed to convey how he went home. He went home slowly, He went home quickly, He went home reluctantly.
  • A stronger verb would show both the how of the action and the emotion: he meandered home. He raced home. He trudged home.
  • Avoid narrations that distance reader from the character: he felt, she heard, they saw.
  • Example: He heard a cars crash. Use: car tires screeched.
  • Remove words that blunt the impact of the verb (wish-washy/tentative).
  • Example: he seemed to find the answer. Verses He found the answer. He discovered the answer.
  • Replace words that are active but over used or unexciting.
  • Example: have, run, come, go, see, look Vs: grip, dash, appear, vanish, spy, peek.

 

Nouns:

  • Are they stor5ng and precise?
  • Can adjectives be replaced with a strong noun?
  • Example: Sam’s friends thought he lived in a big, beautiful house. This doesn’t show the reader how big, or how beautiful, Sam’s house really is.
  • Vs: Sam lived in a castle, at least that’s what his friends thought. This gives the reader a specific point of reference, and shows the contrast between Sam and his friends.

 

Figurative4 & Descriptive Language:

  • Use to amplify meaning and give power to your words.
  • Simile: comparing two unlike things with ‘like’ or ‘as’
  • Outside, the ground is a blanket of rotting leaves.
  • Breaks up sentences to add to the rhythm
  • Stack them in the cellar like buried treasure.
  • The crystal rains fall,
  • Metaphor: Comparing two things that are not alike.
  • Example: snow falls in a blanked of diamonds
  • Hyperbole: exaggerated claims not to be taken literally.
  • Idiom: an expression that says one thing literally but means something else.
  • Personification: give human characteristics to a nonhuman.
  • Onomatopoeia: naming a word or acting by imitating the sounds associated with it.
  • Examples: the fourth however, continued to grow. And grow. Until he was the size of a teapot.
  • They were taught to yip. Never yap!
  • Yip. Yip
  • Ruff!
  • Kids love having fun things to say.
  • Alliteration: repetitive of two or more adjacent or closely connected words that begin with the same sound.

Assonance: Repetition of vowel sounds in two or more adjacent or closely connected words.

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