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Craft Skill

Vivid Verbs

One verb can transform a sentence. Replace weak, generic verbs with precise, powerful ones that show exactly how things happen. Your readers will feel the difference—and so will markers.

The Difference One Verb Makes

Same action, completely different impact:

Weak

"The rain fell on the roof."

Vivid

"The rain hammered the roof."

What Are Vivid Verbs?

Weak verbs tell us what happened. Vivid verbs paint a picture of HOW it happened.

A weak verb requires an adverb to do its job: "She walked quickly." A vivid verb needs no help: "She sprinted." The vivid version is shorter, stronger, and more memorable.

The Adverb Test

If you've added an adverb (quickly, quietly, angrily, slowly), ask yourself: is there a single verb that captures both the action AND the manner? Almost always, the answer is yes. That's your signal to find a vivid verb.

Weak Verbs Watch List

These generic verbs appear constantly in student writing. Replace them with alternatives that show exactly what's happening.

Weak VerbStrong Alternatives
went
strodecreptboltedsaunteredsprinted
said
whisperedbarkedstammeredpleadedrasped
looked
glaredpeeredsquintedscrutinisedscanned
got
seizedearnedsnatchedachievedsecured
was/were + ing
Single verb form (was running → sprinted)Example: "was climbing" → "scaled"
made
craftedforgedassembledmouldedsculpted

Interactive Examples

See how replacing one weak verb transforms the entire sentence. Try hovering over the alternatives.

Movement (1/5)

Technique: Show HOW someone moved, not just that they moved.

Weak Verb

"She went down the stairs."

Generic, tells us little about the action.

Vivid Verb

"She thundered down the stairs."

Specific, shows us exactly how it happens.

Other vivid alternatives:

tumbledglidedcrept

Why NSW Markers Notice This

Vivid verbs directly impact your Selective Test English score across two key areas:

Language & Vocabulary

Vivid verb choices demonstrate sophisticated word selection and precision. Markers award higher scores for word choice that goes beyond basic/generic terms.

Sentence Economy

One powerful verb does the work of weak verb + adverb ("slammed" instead of "closed loudly"). Markers reward efficiency and elegance.

The Marker's Eye

When markers see vivid verbs, they register sophistication. The same events described with "went" vs. "strode" signal vastly different writing maturity. Vivid verbs tell markers you've spent time choosing words intentionally.

Try It Yourself

Replace the weak verbs in this passage with vivid alternatives.

Replace Weak Verbs

"She walked into the dark room and looked around."

Hints: Replace "walked" with a verb showing caution • Replace "looked around" with specific seeing verb • Use more vivid adjectives too (shadowy vs dark)

Building Your Personal Verb Bank

Great writers keep a personal collection of vivid verbs they can draw from. Here's how to build yours:

1. Group by Mood

Keep verbs organised by emotion/intention. Angry verbs (fumed, erupted, bristled), Calm verbs (drifted, settled, nestled), Urgent verbs (sprinted, dashed, bolted).

2. Use a Thesaurus Smartly

Don't just grab any synonym. "Walked" has 30+ alternatives—but "ambled," "sauntered," and "trudged" each mean something different. Choose the one that fits your character.

3. Test with the Adverb Rule

If you've used an adverb (quickly, quietly, angrily), ask: is there a single verb that does this work? Often yes. "Walked quickly" → "sprinted."

4. Read Aloud

Sound matters. "The door slammed" has a satisfying punch. "The door closed loudly" sounds weak. Say your verbs aloud to feel their power.

Practice Vivid Verbs in the Writing Gym

Our Writing Gym has 30+ exercises specifically designed to help you master verb replacement and sentence economy. Get instant AI feedback on every attempt.

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