i was wondering how you make characters talk when your writing a book do you use the word said at the end of every sentence or do you use something else.sorry if this isn't in the right place i just didn't know where else to put it.
i was wondering how you make characters talk when your writing a book do you use the word said at the end of every sentence or do you use something else.sorry if this isn't in the right place i just didn't know where else to put it.
Yeah, Rio's probably going to move your thread. (to the writer's section, I don't hang out there so I don't know the specific location.) But while it's here....
It's called a DIALOGUE TAG.
So when done correctly, looks something like this: (Courtesy of Peanuts)
"I will love you forever." he said.
"Yes yes yes!" she said.
"Forever being a relative term." he said.
She creamed him with a waffle iron.
Now, one musn't always use "said" for a dialogue tag, it's quite dull after awhile, actually. Keep in mind though that they are, for the most part, invisible to the reader.
Shouted, sighed, whispered, breathed, snorted, guffawed, laughed, chuckled, sobbed, cried, bleeped, blipped, etc...
Get a thesaurus to help you with some more original
A word of caution. Some writer's like to use verbs as dialogue tags. While this works under some cases ("He grinned") it is often times sloppy and over down. Use sparingly.
(I mean, come on, how many people can actually "bark" an order for a three-cheese pizza?)
"Make sure the room is brightly lit and stay far away from the TV."
Just use 'said' until you're a better writer, otherwise you'll feel compelled to find the appropriate word for every situation and your writing will be nigh unreadable to anyone who notices.
ok thanks guys
You didn't even say anything Cake!
"Make sure the room is brightly lit and stay far away from the TV."
Once the speakers become easily identifiable—whether it be by the pattern of the dialogue or the unique style of speaking the character have—then tags may become unnecessary.
SPOILER! :
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Also, AnimeRebel's examples are incorrect. Whenever the tag is at the end of the quote, the punctuation right before the end of the quote can never include a period. The period is changed to a comma.
SPOILER! :
Last edited by Celestial-Fox; 12-21-2012 at 06:32 PM.
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