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Aris Academy
💬 Writing Skill #6

Dialogue Tags

"Said angrily," "replied nervously," "exclaimed excitedly"—these adverb-laden tags are the mark of amateur writing. Learn to use action beats that show emotion through what characters do, not what you tell us they feel.

Show, Don't Tag

Same dialogue, completely different impact:

Weak Tag

"Get out!" she said angrily.

Action Beat

"Get out!" She slammed her fist on the table.

What Are Action Beats?

An action beat is a small piece of action that accompanies dialogue. Instead of telling readers how something was said ("she said nervously"), you show them through what the character does ("She twisted the ring on her finger").

Action beats are more powerful than dialogue tags because they engage readers visually. We see the nervous fidgeting. We don't need to be told the character is nervous.

The Adverb Alarm

If you've written "said" + an adverb (angrily, nervously, excitedly, quietly, sadly), you've triggered the adverb alarm. Stop and replace it with an action beat that shows that emotion.

Common Mistakes & Fixes

See how to transform weak dialogue tags into engaging action beats.

Weak

"Go away," she said angrily.

Strong

"Go away." She slammed the door in his face.

Weak

"I love you," he said quietly.

Strong

"I love you." The words were barely a whisper.

Weak

"I'm fine," she said, lying.

Strong

"I'm fine." She smiled, but her eyes stayed flat.

Before & After Examples

See how action beats bring dialogue to life.

Replace Said + Adverb (1/8)

Technique: Replace "said angrily" with an action beat that shows the anger.

Weak Tag

"I can't believe you did that," he said sadly.

Action Beat

"I can't believe you did that." He turned away, shoulders slumping.

Why NSW Markers Notice This

Language Score

Action beats demonstrate sophisticated Language & Vocabulary. They show you can convey emotion through action, not just adjectives and adverbs.

Content Score

Good dialogue with action beats creates depth in your Content & Ideas. Characters feel real when we see them move, not just hear them speak.

The "-ly" Hunt

Search your dialogue for words ending in "-ly" (angrily, nervously, excitedly). Each one is an opportunity to replace weak telling with powerful showing.

Types of Action Beats

Here are different ways to show emotion without telling.

Body Language

Posture, gestures, movements: "He crossed his arms." "She leaned closer." "His shoulders sagged." These show attitude and emotion.

Facial Expressions

Eyes, mouth, brow: "Her jaw tightened." "He raised an eyebrow." "A smile tugged at her lips." The face reveals everything.

Small Actions

Fidgeting, interacting with objects: "She twisted the ring on her finger." "He tapped his pen against the desk." These show nervous energy or distraction.

Environment Interaction

How characters relate to their surroundings: "She stared out the window." "He kicked at a loose stone." Setting and action combine.

Try It Yourself

Replace the weak dialogue tag with an action beat that shows the emotion.

Transform This

"Get out!" she said angrily.

Hints: What physical action shows anger? • What might she do with her body? • Show the anger, don't tell it

Pro Tips

1. "Said" Is Fine (Sometimes)

You don't need to replace every "said." For quick back-and-forth dialogue, invisible tags keep things flowing. Save action beats for moments that need emotional weight.

2. Use Contradiction

The most powerful action beats show characters doing the opposite of what they're saying: "I'm fine." She stared at the ceiling, blinking hard. This creates subtext.

3. Don't Overdo It

Not every line needs an action beat. Too many become exhausting. Use them strategically at emotional peaks, not for every exchange.

Practice Dialogue Tags in the Writing Gym

Our Writing Gym has exercises specifically designed to train you to replace weak dialogue tags with powerful action beats. Get instant AI feedback.

Related Skills

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