Clichés, Conundrums, and Chestnuts
Hackneyed phrases, slang, and truisms should be eliminated from your writing
vocabulary as much as possible. This is one time where you should not write
what is commonly heard. These phrases are so overused they are loathed by
writing professionals. Clichés are frequently combined into several groups. You
may use these in conversation, but don't use them in your fiction!
Comparisons:
- As red as a tomato
- As cool as a cucumber
- As dark as night
- As deep as the sea
- As loud as thunder
Sayings (or proverbs):
- A bird in the hand is worth two in the bunch
- The journey of a thousand miles
- The writing on the wall
- Two birds in the hand
Lines:
- If I said you had a beautiful body…
- Do you know karate because your body is kickin'?
Phrases:
- Like a thief in the night
- Madly in love
- Easier said than done
- I wouldn't be in their shoes for their socks
- What's good for the goose is good for the gander
- So many you couldn't stir them with a stick
Pairs:
- Hot to trot
- Locked and loaded
- Wining and dining
- Fame and fortune
- Tit for Tat
- Black and blue
Imagery:
- Cast pearls before swine
- Up the creek without a paddle
- Raining cats and dogs
- Running around in circles
- Making like a bandit
- Rounding the bend
- Up in Smoke
Trendy Words (Used Today, Laughed at Tomorrow):
- Awesome
- Totally
- Groovy
- Cool
- Like (where it is not supposed to be)
- Radical
- Gnarly
Last Updated (Thursday, 23 July 2009 17:08)
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