Activate: A Thesaurus of Actions & Tactics for Dynamic Genre Fiction
By Damon Suede
5/5
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About this ebook
Fiction is action. Activate is an author's thesaurus of dramatic possibilities that will galvanize your characterization and dramatization. Verbalizing any narrative requires juicy language with the vibrancy readers crave. This handy writing reference focuses on language's powerhouse: verbs, featuring 5,300 potent options sorted into three useful contexts.
ALPHABETICAL: an A-Z catalog of actions and tactics, including antonyms for each to supercharge character chemistry.
CATEGORICAL: verbal options especially suited for the twelve most popular book types and their tropes.
DIRECTIONAL: sections sorting verbs by vibe to help you shape the emotional flow of a story for maximum mojo.
...and for anyone new to verbalizing a story, a quick intro and overview to kickstart your process.
No other genre resource of this kind exists. Unlike other thesauri, Activate gets down to the brass-tacks of telling a tale: actions that matter and tactics that fascinate.
Plug into the source! Whether you're planning a project or deep in revisions, this Live Wire Writer Guide comes loaded with vibrant, interactive language to amp your voice, blast your blocks, and energize your genre fiction at every stage.
(n.b. the ebook edition includes over 190,000 dynamic hotlinks to maximize utility and ease navigation.)
Damon Suede
Damon Suede grew up out-n-proud deep in the anus of right-wing America, and escaped as soon as it was legal. Having lived all over, he’s earned his crust as a model, a messenger, a promoter, a programmer, a sculptor, a singer, a stripper, a bookkeeper, a bartender, a techie, a teacher, a director… but writing has ever been his bread and butter. He has been happily partnered for over fifteen years with the most loving, handsome, shrewd, hilarious, noble man to walk this planet. Damon is a proud member of the Romance Writers of America and currently serves on its national Board of Directors. Though new to romance fiction, Damon has been writing for print, stage, and screen for over two decades, which is both more and less glamorous than you might imagine. He’s won some awards, but counts his blessings more often: his amazing friends, his demented family, his beautiful husband, his loyal fans, and his silly, stern, seductive Muse who keeps whispering in his ear, year after year. Damon would love to hear from you… Website: www.DamonSuede.com Twitter: @DamonSuede Facebook: www.facebook.com/damon.suede.author Goodreads: www.goodreads.com/damonsuede
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Activate - Damon Suede
Foreword
This author-friendly thesaurus supplements Verbalize, the first title in my Live Wire Writer Guides series, by offering thousands of active, dynamic verbs for use in fiction. Plenty of thesauri exist, but not one focused purely on writable actions and tactics for genre stories.
I came to fiction from showbiz, in which story and character cannot rely on traits, backstory, or other personal ad trivia because of the production process. My approach to genre fiction sprang from the idea that writers need tools that can deliver the goods on a deadline and that the impersonal ad
approach to character is more of a time-suck than a credible method.
While most writing guides encourage the use of characteristics to portray people on the page, writers rarely use a tenth of the ancillary details demanded by popular methods, which is a waste of time and talent.
Working writers need tools that get results.
When most folks start writing fiction, adjectives and adverbs feel decorative and sexy…so many possibilities, so much ornamental specificity. Nouns seem reassuringly tangible and clear until you realize that no matter how solid or how beautiful all those other words are, without verbs, nothing happens. Verbs show, where all other words tell.
Action is all.
When I say a protagonist is clever,
freckled,
or predatory,
I expect you to accept the provided descriptor at face value. If I describe that individual with a noun like thief,
gargoyle,
or politician,
I must rely on your education and visualization to fill in the blanks with generic assumptions about those archetypal identities. On the other hand, the moment I make that character volunteer,
slash,
or optimize
something, their actions paint a clear picture, their energy flows through the pages. Verbs give life to your fiction and power to your prose.
• MODIFIERS tell. Adjectives and adverbs only provide prechewed interpretation to explain other words, relying on preexisting opinion to decorate the story.
• NOUNS suggest. They populate a story’s landscape with subjects and objects by evoking general assumptions, stereotypes, and simplifications.
• VERBS show. They express the energy of characters and direct their story because they relate actual forces shaping the narrative.
A smart writer learns to invest energy and time where it will pay dividends. That means getting to the marrow of the story, the fundamental actions and tactics that bring it to life.
Obviously, a book is more than a string of verbs. All the parts of speech help tell a tale, but a character simply has to take action to inspire opinions and feelings.
Stories are made of action like pigs are made of pork.
Readers look for meaning and significance to engage their feelings, and therefore every detail must work in service of your story. Rather than fumbling with trivia, interviews, archetypes, or psychological theory to create a fully rounded
character, the author’s task in characterization is to craft action figures, purpose-built narrative devices used to extract emotions from the audience. People read for emotional stimulation, and as a genre professional, you must structure that emotional ride with the precision and complexity of a roller coaster so they can expect a satisfying emotional ride, every time.
Great genre fiction evokes emotions by portraying dynamic characters and their transformations. Audiences show up to experience their actions and interactions as they battle the odds to achieve happiness. As the characters struggle toward their happy endings, they shape the story and impact everyone around them with verbs.
When storytelling, modifiers can encumber and nouns can become obstacles, but by definition verbs have the power to do anything.
Because you want characters to change things and do things, you need verbs that have an impact, known grammatically as transitive verbs. A transitive verb is a verb that acts upon or interacts with an object, impacting someone or something external to the subject.
To verbalize a story effectively, authors need a steady supply of dynamic, transitive verbs appropriate to the task of spinning a yarn.
Most dictionaries and a few thesauri will let you know if verbs are transitive, but not all. For the past few years, my students have urged me to compile a list of verbs specifically appropriate for genre fictioneering to fill the gap in the available resources.
This thesaurus is a compendium of transitive verbs appropriate for use while verbalizing a story via character actions and tactics to facilitate the process of genre writing. I assembled this book as a supplement for working writers looking to verbalize their stories and deepen their knowledge of dynamic verbs in general. Inside these pages you’ll find:
• a very brief recap of the techniques from Verbalize for anyone unfamiliar with my approach to structure and characterization.
• an alphabetical thesaurus of verbs useful as actions and tactics, along with antonyms suited to capturing chemistry on the page and characterizing powerful relationships.
• genre verbs especially useful for twelve categories of popular fiction and suggestive of that genre’s prevalent tropes and subgenres.
• directional verbs sorting actions and tactics along two energetic axes to amplify shifts and complications between scenes.
I wanted to create the kind of resource I’d use daily in my own writing. I’ve used this resource at every stage of its creation, in fact. Obviously verbs will appear in more than one place, but I’ve tried to minimize repetition and maximize utility wherever possible.
Art is a hard dollar and everyone willing to do the job and support their genres deserves all the help they can get. Whether you use my verbalization technique or simply want a quick reference packed with juicy, active verbiage, I hope you’ll find Activate a useful and inspiring resource.
Go write great books, because I want to read them.
These are the things that matter—experiences that are almost impossible to render on the page. This is the grand project we are engaged in, why we worry about words, and why we must make them dance in our every sentence.
Constance Hale¹
Verbalization
"In short: THERE ARE NO RULES.
And HERE THEY ARE."
Scott McCloud²
If you’ve read Verbalize or taken one of my workshops on characterization and story planning, feel free to skip past this section to the usage guide, but for everyone else, a word about verbalizing fiction.
As a reference, this book presupposes a passing familiarity with my method of characterization and story planning either from my teaching or writing. That said, I don’t expect you to rush out and pick up another book to make this one useful, so I want to explain this guide’s purpose even for first-time verbalizers. Again, if you know the drill, feel free to dive right into the verbs. If you do not, read on; I promise to make it swift.
In the spirit of "Previously seen on…" television recaps, I’ll offer a quick summary of my book Verbalize and the techniques it covers:
Characters need to do stuff that matters, and for best results that means grappling with their intentions head-on via their choices and behavior in the story.
Characters are not faces, but forces…arcs of transformation revealed by high-stakes choices.
Given the scope and complexity of writing genre fiction, a savvy writer learns to align all of the components of a character so that each component supports and connects to every other to minimize effort and maximize effect.
Because human brains evolved to seek and solve patterns, stories work best when they attract attention and reward audiences with meaningful resolution. Readers discover interesting gaps in a story and fill them in, creating satisfying closure that connects the emotional dots between the characters and within themselves. The reader’s imagination does most of the work, but only if the writer provides fascinating details…like grit for oysters primed to build a pearl.
Since art relies on attention and disruption is the primary generator of attention, significant contrast offers the single most powerful tool in the writer’s toolkit. Opposing forces generate friction, which releases energy in a series of events that make up a story. That energy appears within the story as the actions of characters who must be not personalities, but forces of their own nature.
Stories make readers feel something at a distance via empathetic magic, by sticking pins
in characters to create audiences’ emotions. In grammatical structure of genre stories, the protagonist and problem of a story mirror the subject and predicate of sentences.
All characters wrestle with a personal, persistent void that drives all their actions and objectives…a persistent need/trauma/wound/error/lack/scar in their past that interferes with their happiness. Their desire for happiness changes them and drives them toward their ultimate story goal, and creates their Goal/Motivation/Conflict, but their essential energy characterizes them.
Consequently, action is the core of every character, the aligning principle of all characterization: actions speak louder than words. Those character actions are best expressed as active, dynamic verbs…expressive of the character’s energy and impacting the world around them. The most powerful action always arises from the character’s void because it reveals their idiosyncratic approach to life and hope for happiness. In essence, characters are sculptures that carve each other.
The unforgettable moments in any story spring from its verbs, which inevitably and explicitly dramatize energy and flow. Genre fiction is inherently grammatical, drawing power from the structure of language.
Aligning all of a characterization with a clear, dramatic action improves structure, drafting, and revision drastically. Since characters must do things that matter, their actions inevitably affect the world around them. For actions, the best verb options are transitive—taking an object—because they direct character efforts out in the world with meaningful impact.
Character actions will always be a transitive verb: a verb that acts upon or interacts with a person, object, entity, or idea outside the character. Transitive verbs keep your characters subjective by giving them an objective, and they create a subject by specifying an object. For example:
• She writes the novel. (Writes
is the transitive verb.)
• He revises the chapter. (Revises
is the transitive verb.)
Genre authors must draw on active, dramatic verbs to make anything happen in a story, but many common verbs make for feeble, forgettable character actions, some by their very nature.
Many verbs cannot impact the world around them, instead depicting the condition of a character without allowing them to do anything. These simply existing
verbs that do not impact the outside world are intransitive. Intransitives cannot take a direct object because they describe a mood, state, or reflex.
• The assassin sulked. (Sulked
is intransitive, conveying a mood.)
• Mimi waltzed. (Waltzed
is intransitive, describing a state of being.)
• The goat yawned. (Yawned
is intransitive, depicting a reflex.)
Intransitive verbs leave characters marooned inside their own head and heart. Result: passive beat, dead scene, inert character.
To complicate matters further, some flexible verbs can operate as either transitive or intransitive depending on whether a direct object receives the action. In She drives away,
drive is intransitive because it describes a state, but in "She drives friends away," drive is transitive because it affects an object.
Check out Verbalize for more in-depth information about this technique and its potential in characterization and dramatization.
Bottom line: Strong verb, strong character.
With those juicy transitives thrumming under the hood, characters need to direct their actions at something. Filmed entertainment often solves this action problem with a MacGuffin…a concrete target of pursuit and tension, visible onscreen, that gives characters something clear to struggle over. Because fiction is more innately subjective and internal, it benefits from giving characters subtle, complex story goals that are challenging, significant, relatable. This focuses a character upon an objective, like a mountain that needs climbing.
A character pursues that objective via their action with relentless focus. By choosing potent, positive actions for characters, an author keeps the story (and its writing) energized and clear. The character’s action and objective persist for the length of the story, which creates coherence in their depiction.
Of course, a character cannot simply do one thing without variation for the course of the book, and so that action gives rise to strategically varied tactics specific to scenes. Though the character’s action lasts the entire story, a new tactic—derived as synonyms of that action—appears in each scene like rungs on the action ladder.
Tactics are in effect re-actions, in which small shifts reveal internal complexity and narrative reversals, but since they are synonymous, the character coheres. Audiences experience a range of cohesive behavior, which allows them to extrapolate emotions and psychology.
Since tactics also use transitive verbs, they too require a target for their energy. Objects offer a character a distinct goal for each scene, like a problem that needs solving now.
Just as objectives are the character’s story goal pursued via the action, the objects are a character’s scene goals pursued by individual tactics in different contexts. In the same way, just as an action breaks down into tactics, the objective breaks down into specific, external, and dynamic objects that hold the energy of the scene like a battery.
Each new story beat requires a shift in tactic (and object) as the character re-acts to events and tries to pursue their overall story goal (objective). Taken together the tactics represent the character’s overall action during the story.
Once you know your character’s tactics, you can use them to craft a comprehensive character arc rising to the most dramatic tactic via significant moments, using character to shape plot and plot to explore character. Further, certain actions and tactics suggest genres, subgenres, and tropes because they convey categories of emotion.
Verbs shape vibe.
Character and plot are only two ways of understanding story, plot as external cause and effect; character as internal cause and effect. Transformation and escalation don’t happen in straight lines, so shifting tactical directions will produce powerful results in any genre story. And each story will resolve conflict and tension as it escalates to an emotionally satisfying ending.
Verbalization is what most writers do unconsciously when they write a story. Exploring the process consciously simplifies the writing process and enhances the final product.
So… to break the process of verbalization down completely: Writers and readers in search of meaning pay attention via alignment to characters with significance that suggests patterns created by contrast that causes friction and escalation during events in order to generate energy expressed through a void that inspires action in pursuit of an objective through relationships that require tactics to handle objects in an arc varying directions to maximize transformation to reach the kind of emotional experience fans crave.
The changing wisdom of successive generations discards ideas, questions facts, demolishes theories. But the artist appeals to that part of our being which is not dependent on wisdom: to that in us which is a gift and not an acquisition—and, therefore, more permanently enduring.
Joseph Conrad³
Usage
Before I unleash a torrent of sexy verbs, a few words about the organization of this book and why verbalization works so well. Everything that follows draws upon a few basic craft precepts:
• Every character has a core action in pursuit of their story goal (aka objective).
• Every action manifests as related tactics to achieve scene goals (aka objects).
• Because characters direct their actions and tactics at object(ive)s, those actions and tactics will always be transitive (active) verbs.
• Every character’s action and tactics affect every other character’s action and tactics via interactions.
• The stronger the relationship, the more oppositional (antonymic) the actions of the characters, the more powerful the effect on each other.
When verbalizing a story, the goal is to find the clearest, simplest expression of that character’s energy so they can do what matters in a story. Every other component of that character’s traits and identity will align with that essential action.
Verbs provide all the energy in writing. Actions are verbs. Tactics are verbs. Effective actions and tactics share transitivity, impact, and emotional legibility.
Focusing on the character’s actions from the start ensures they’re memorable and meaningful. The easiest way to identify that action is to identify the character’s central void—the persistent injury/need/lack/scar of the past that impedes their present and future happiness. Invariably, a character’s action springs from that void as a credible solution.
Every character wants to be happy, and their action reveals their innate approach. Compile a range of related verbs your character would consider a go-to solution in every situation and see which ones feel right. Each verb will subtly shift the portrayal, and each opens up a new set of dramatic possibilities.
Depending on how well you know your characters, you may start out with a solid grasp of what they do and why they do it at any moment. No one else knows this imaginary person as well as you do. As you bring them to life, their actions and tactics will portray them faithfully or falsely…and only you can judge how close you came. Give yourself permission to make bold choices boldly and also to nail your failures with unsentimental precision.
However well you know your cast, whatever your process for spinning a yarn, look for actions that are fun and physical, that direct energy outward so characters impact their community and environment.
Context changes the nuances of a verb, and when verbalizing a story, that goes triple. Be sure you know how the action or tactic operates and the specific object(ive) receiving the verb’s action. If you cannot connect the dots, your audience won’t.
The best actions and tactics operate internally and externally, with a tangible physical effect outside of the character as well as a mental resonance and an emotional impact that require no explanation to the reader. When verbalizing, keep an eye on all three levels:
• PHYSICAL: does the action/tactic direct energy outside of the character into clear, tangible goals that elicit emotional engagement? (e.g. a bully doesn’t gripe,
but rather torments bystanders, a socialite doesn’t sparkle,
but rather dazzles admirers.)
• MENTAL: does the action/tactic create clear, dynamic, dramatic images in the mind’s eye through interesting sound and sense? (e.g. not touch
but massage, not harm
but detonate, not admire
but lionize)
• EMOTIONAL: does the action/tactic offer variation and intensity evincing the full spectrum of your character’s behavior and nature? (e.g. a disguise
character can impersonate and embellish and camouflage, a stall
character can clog or divert or short-circuit)
Every other detail of your character’s path through the story will align with that central action, so choose actions that afford maximum emotional significance and congruity. You want to enjoy the writing and you need your audience to enjoy the reading. Stack the deck in everyone’s favor with clear verbs that are physical and fun, internal and external, visceral and vital.
Think laterally, not literally.
You can use verbalization to build out the cast for your book (see bonus exercise). As you begin to verbalize secondary characters, refer to the antonyms of your main character’s action. Those will give the rest of your cast additional friction and chemistry right out of the gate because their actions and tactics will clash by default. A larger topic for another book, but worth mentioning. Give yourself permission to have fun with that verbiage.
Additionally, if you want to splash around in verbalization with your colleagues, the @LiveWireGuides twitter account features a #DailyVerb hashtag as well as article links, updates, and more.
Active language is active language. While this thesaurus is primarily intended for verbalizing your characters and scenes, it can just as easily provide active, dynamic language for the literal writing at any stage of your project as well.
Planning?
Activate includes thousands of potential character behaviors, along with oppositional actions/reactions that will generate instant context and drama. If you already have a strong sense of your character’s essential vibe and voice, plunge right into the alphabetical listing in search of one central action that defines everything they do on the page. At the same time, consider any secondary verb candidates as likely tactics that might not define the character but might deepen resonance and power a scene effectively.
Plug into the source! Rooting your project in language frees your voice and sidesteps genre clichés. By starting with actions, rather than superficial traits and quirks, everything about your character will align in a way that produces deep resonance and empathy within readers. Intriguing or challenging words inspire bold creative choices and offer a solid starting point for the actual task of filling those pages.
If you don’t have a particular character in mind and need to start a story in a specific genre/subgenre, flip to the genre sections and make a list of verbs that resonate. What actions and tactics would be fun to write? What verbs suggest tropes you’d like to tackle? What combinations of verbs would produce meaningful friction and juicy emotion?
Maybe you just have to kick off a project, any project, but nothing has grabbed hold of you. If you’re operating without any clear sense of character or the world you’re writing, take a look at the directional grouping for sets of action/tactics that might lead you to a story idea. Let those verbs take you somewhere fascinating.
Exploring?
Activate sorts verbs alphabetically, generically, and directionally so you can approach your initial project planning from many angles so that it anchors the process in the power of words. If you’re still trying to get a firm handle on the story and its characters, this book helps anyone splash around in the connotations and implications of the various possibilities of verbalization, whether you’re a plotter or pantser, a newbie or an old hand.
When testing out a verb as an overarching character action, make sure you weigh the full array of meanings with an eye toward the possible tactics in individual scenes. Unpack the nuances, paradoxes, and contradictions in that verb’s etymology. What is its origin, history, and evolution? Flag resonances, surprises, or significant details that feel germane to the character.
Shades of meaning play an outsized role in fiction. Associations, inference, and nuance play a large part in the emotional experience of the reader, so even a slight variation of verbalization can alter a character or a scene dramatically. Even without knowing the precise verbs in play, an audience will discern the pattern at work under the hood because that’s how brains work: we extrapolate significance from the available info and discernible patterns. Because you’re using words the audience knows, closure is instinctive, and the coherence inevitable. If you choose your words carefully, the character feels real.
Single out the most fascinating, specific action for that character, then round it out with an appealing range of secondary tactics to charge their scenes along the way. You already know some of them: most of your discarded actions will serve as perfect tactics. Think of tactics as rungs on the action ladder: as they accumulate, the character climbs toward their objective—one confrontation, one discovery, one object at a time.
Synonyms make a great starting point, especially with verbs that reveal a range of meanings and interpretations (e.g., Empress Livia’s action to poison means to murder
but also to pollute,
to corrupt,
and to nullify.
). To deepen characters, consider using synonyms of those synonyms to reveal more radical tactical possibilities. Tactics should offer further resonant variations to change the story’s tune while honoring the melody. They’ll help you as a writer, and the resultant scenes will appeal mightily to the reader.
Strong verbs will guarantee the writing and the reading stay emotional, evocative, and enjoyable.
Drafting?
Activate is chockablock with story spurs and character prompts. If you’re hunkered down cranking out your pages and trying to keep the flow, you can use this book to lubricate the process.
Use these listings to nail down and upgrade the actions for the story and the tactics in the scenes. Especially in the early phases of committing words to paper, choosing potent, oppositional language will help activate a scene for all the participants, minimizing the need for exposition and qualification. Likewise, powerful verbs will keep that character in sharp focus so that they earn the attention they deserve.
When it comes to action and tactics, any choice is better than no choice. Get in the habit of replacing weaker options with stronger choices. Happily, the moment you write a beat, the scene will let you know if the tactics work and the story will let you know if the action does its job credibly.
When verbalizing your cast, keep those interdependent actions and tactics in mind: what seemed central may gradually reveal itself to be tactical as the character moves from identity to essence (as Michael Hague⁴ puts it) over the story’s course.
Whether for pantsers who prefer to discover character by improvising on the page or plotters who may structure events without a clear sense of intention, the initial knowledge of a character’s capacities can give way to a deeper and more complex swath of possibilities. The action that seemed fundamental may turn out to be only a successful tactic to be supplanted by a more relevant, resonant option.
Write is a verb! By definition verbs make stuff, take stuff, break stuff, fake stuff. Learn to enjoy the depth and drama intrinsic to language. Let those actions and tactics drive your story as well as the process of putting it on the page for the first time.
Revising?
Activate offers a vast range of options that can enrich the language in your project during the editorial process. If the draft is done and your character feels passive, vague, or forgettable, look for an action or tactic upgrade that will amplify a pivotal beat in the story. If the plot suffers from logic leaps or inexplicable behavior, look to the tactics deployed in play during the problematic scenes to hone the emotional impact.
When facing a completed but imperfect manuscript, verbs can steer choices, solutions, and overhauls. Just eyeballing the language of a wonky chapter, scene, or section can diagnose the deficits. Refining, amplifying, and specifying character behavior has exponential impact on every element of storytelling. By starting at the root—the language of the story—you can pinpoint trouble spots with ruthless specificity. Words work.
Allow those actions and tactics to shift and reflect your knowledge of the story. If you notice initial false
actions only express a certain mode or period of the character’s behavior, dig deeper for the core action that connects all of the tactics.
Keep going back to pinpoint the precise action that expresses the character’s energy as it flows through the story. Look for ways to escalate and transform their tactics (aka re-actions) in each scene for maximum emotional impact.
Remember: you’re the writer, but outside perspectives can save your bacon. Listen to editors, betas, and trusted colleagues who call your bluff. Whether they’re right or wrong, you’ll only know if you pay attention to them and to the iffy writing that gives them pause. There’s an old Yiddish proverb: if one person says you’re drunk, have another, but when three people tell you you’re drunk, go lie down.
If readers say a scene isn’t working, you don’t need to obey their suggestions blindly, but you should try to locate and solve the problem that gave them pause. When someone tells you there’s a problem, nine times out of ten they’re right. When they tell you how to solve it, nine times out of ten they’re wrong. Besides, if they solve the problem, then they’re writing the book. Learn to listen and also to clean up your own messes.
By clarifying and strengthening your language, you can transform your characters, their stories, and ultimately your career as a genre author.
Stretch yourself! Be wary of the impulse to stick with safe or expected options. Repeating the same actions and tactics is how lazy authors end up regurgitating the same book ad nauseam. Even the most fascinating, popular actions have traps built into them. And as an artist, you’re either growing or you’re dying.
As you verbalize your stories, you’ll learn to explore the power and possibility buried in all these verbs, their motion and emotion, their scope and secrets. Mindbending treasure, infinite joy, and divine fire hide inside each one.
Using action verbs instead of adjectives is a way of approaching the emotional center of a scene in a way that is experiential and playable rather than descriptive and result-oriented. What we do affects our feelings and can create feeling.
Judith Weston, director⁵
Part I: General
The only writers who survive the ages are those who understand the need for action in a novel.
Dean R. Koontz⁶
The following section makes up the bulk of Activate, cross-referencing thousands of transitive verbs suited to use as actions and tactics in your fiction. This alphabetical listing includes more than 5,300 unique verbs distributed over 3,200 entries. I’ve included a healthy smattering of colorful jargon and slang but eliminated most archaisms and obsolete usages.
Each entry offers synonyms for the primary verb but also some synonyms of synonyms that vary in connotation and application. Many of the options are direct synonyms (=) but some are only comparable (≈) in meaning. In mathematical terms, many synonyms = their entries, but some ≈ their entries, to offer more variety and help you build more interesting sets of tactics for your characters. My goal wasn’t to dissect their meanings, but to lay out an inspiring smorgasbord so you can follow your muse where she leads you.
In an attempt to curb redundancy in this alphabetical section, the less common synonyms only appear within listings for more common verbs.
Rather than trying to be exhaustive, I’ve tried to err on the side of dramatic potency and range. These are transitive verbs appropriate as actions or tactics, which can each take an object(ive). Please note that some of these verbs do have intransitive uses as well, so be careful to ask yourself who or what receives the force of the verb to keep your characters interacting with their world and doing stuff that matters.
Your characters don’t act in a bubble. Relationships are shown by the effect characters have on each other (i.e., no effect = no relationship). For this reason, the greater the opposition between actions and tactics, the more powerful and significant the interactions between those characters. Antonyms will give you the greatest number of options for dramatic tension and transformation between the members of your cast.
In addition to omitting dedicated intransitives, I’ve also skipped phrasal verbs that can leech specificity from your writing. For example, your characters may probe the evidence, but they cannot snoop the evidence. Snoop
is a phrasal verb that requires a preposition. You cannot snoop something; you can only snoop through, in, or around something. For that reason, probe
appears in the pages that follow and snoop
does not.
Remember: keep things transitive, interacting with and acting upon something outside of the character. When choosing an action or tactic, make certain you are using its full transitive power by identifying the object receiving the energy of the verb: Subject + Verb + Object.
Keep looking at your story and characters grammatically (Verb + Target + Progress) and you’ll always know exactly what takes the energy of the verb.
• ACTION: Because the objective takes the entire story to achieve (or not), the character must continually adapt and re-strategize to get it. A character’s ultimate path to happiness would be rendered as: Action + Objective + Adjustment = Story.
• TACTIC: Because the character must grapple with the object in a scene (or not), the character must process developments and re-actions to improve their next strategy for the next object. In each dramatic beat, a character’s steps toward happiness would be rendered as: Tactic + Object + Response = Scene.
Although challenging, any action or tactic can work, but the more negative the action, the more ruthlessly specific the objective required to keep that action dramatic. If you have a character who avoids, they need to avoid one specific thing or person, not a concept, memory, or idea.
We want to see a character win a specific challenge, not avoid failure. Negatives derail and deaden character energy; a character cannot play a negative in a scene. Avoidance and deflection make your characters less specific and less intentional in their actions. For powerful scenes and characters, keep intentions positive so they stay significant, challenging, and relatable.
While I was compiling this thesaurus, a few negative transitive verbs cropped up repeatedly: avoid, ignore, neglect, prevent, etc. Their very ubiquity became comical because every time I couldn’t find clear antonyms for a verb, those negatives turned up like sticky, fuzzy pennies perfectly poised to foil tactics and negate actions. In a sense they are anti-verbs.
Be wary of defaulting to these inherently inert, negative behaviors. They will generate hurdles and headaches because that’s their function. Use them with conscious caution.
Yes, negatives serve a purpose, but when using them to verbalize a character, don’t let them dilute or impede the story. All of them (and their synonyms) can make for fascinating tactics under the right circumstances, but as overarching character actions they steer a character towards generality, inertia, and passivity. Positive actions always yield better dramatic results than negative actions.
Rather than focusing on the negatives that motivate your character, see positive goals you can place before them to keep them moving in clear, specific directions. For this reason, I’ve marked some of the most inherently negative actions in the text with a minus sign (-) to denote their negativity. (i.e., -avoid, -ignore, -neglect, -prevent, etc.)
For best results, accentuate positive intentions.
Additionally, stative
verbs lean towards moods, abstraction, and internal states. Statives only work as actions and tactics so long as that character pursues objectives and objects that are adamantly specific, concrete, and challenging in ways that require no explanation. Some statives are transitive and when used with care can serve as actions and tactics. The issue is the inherent passivity of stative verbs. Characters can contemplate,
prefer,
or suspect
their way through a book, but dramatizing those behaviors will require concrete objects and serious ingenuity. To use abstract actions effectively, you’ll want to balance their figurative, passive bent against some literal character conflict and pursuit.
To help you identify potential trouble and remind you that their abstraction may confuse readers, I’ve flagged these entries with a reversed question mark symbol and a warning: (¿) ABSTRACTION ALERT. Concrete goals essential!
All of this section’s entries are listed alphabetically and include formatting and symbols to help you navigate swiftly.
• Each primary verb is given in ALL CAPS.
• The list of synonyms appear in italicized lower case.
• Each entry will be tagged with its primary "direction as indicated by the relevant symbol in parentheses.
(→) PUSH verbs move away from the character.
(←) PULL verbs move toward the character.
(+) JOIN verbs connect something or someone external.
(/) SPLIT verbs divide something or someone external.
• At the end of each entry, you’ll find a selection of relevant antonyms in parentheses flagged with a not equal
sign, e.g., (≠ antonym, antonym, antonym)
Additionally, when a verb has more than one general meaning, each interpretation will be split into a new entry with its own set of synonyms and antonyms and the relevant directional tag.
Transitive verbs run the gamut as far as connotations and usages; some have multiple meanings which vary in direction. For example, scour
has two major transitive meanings:
• SCOUR (→) means to scrub, as in The janitor scoured the floor.
…a push option that extends the energy from the character into the environment.
• SCOUR (←) means to search, as in Alexis scoured the files.
…a pull option that indicates investigation via a metaphor of scrutiny drawing information toward the character.
Likewise, some verbs offer multiple meanings that all operate along the same axis, such as help,
which has two join meanings, both interacting with an external entity:
• One HELP (+) means to assist, as in Jerome helped rookies on the weekends.
• One HELP (+) means to improve, as in The surgeon helped her patient.
Please don’t take these direction groupings as absolute; context and connotations play havoc with meanings. But directions can prove useful when a scene needs a boost. For more information on these tactical modes, see Part III: Directions or the longer discussion in Chapter 12 of Verbalize.
Just to help you navigate swiftly, here is a sample entry explaining the different areas and designations:
Image No. 1I always tell my students: when identifying your character’s action and tactics, you’ll feel the pull of the right option, in the way a dowser feels the tug towards water underground. Feel free to splash around in the verbs; some of my best characters and dramatic situations have arisen from instinctive reactions to groovy language.
The right word will reveal itself to you with a magnetic attraction that will not, cannot, and should not be denied. Just listen with your heart and your voice, and you will feel it: the inescapable rightness for this particular character (with actions) or this moment (for tactics) will ring in you consonant as a bell. Those reverberations connect the character to their world and to the lives of real people in your readers’ lives.
You’re a writer: finding the right word is the whole gig.
Allow the sound, sense, and symbolism of the verbs to inspire your work, to kick your butt, to push you out of the comfort zones that slowly, surely, steadily strangle your voice. Follow your gut and let the muse drag you into unexpected terrain. Give yourself permission to have fun!
A
-ABANDON (/): abjure, chuck, deliver, depart, -desert, discard, -disown, -ditch, drop, dump, eject, -escape, evacuate, expel, -flee, fling, forfeit, -forsake, heave, isolate, jettison, jilt, junk, leave, maroon, offload, orphan, -quit, -reject, release, relinquish, -renounce, -repudiate, sacrifice, scrap, seclude, shed, shuck, -snub, strand, surrender, unload, vacate, withdraw, yield (≠ acquire, adopt, cherish, colonize, defend, embrace, gather, guard, harbor, hold, indemnify, invade, keep, maintain, obtain, occupy, own, patrol, populate, possess, protect, pursue, reclaim, redeem, remainder, rescue, reserve, retain, retrofit, revisit, save, scavenge, steal, take, withhold)
-ABANDON (/): -abort, abrogate, annul, call, -cancel, countermand, -discontinue, drop, end, -halt, interrupt, invalidate, -nullify, recall, recant, relinquish, repeal, -rescind, retract, reverse, revoke, scrap, scrub, stop, surrender, suspend, terminate, -void, withdraw (≠ begin, brainstorm, commence, continue, engage, initiate, keep, pledge, promise, start, undertake)
-ABANDON (/): abdicate, -abort, cease, cede, close, conclude, -discontinue, -ditch, drop, end, finish, forego, forswear, -halt, jettison, leave, pause, -quit, relinquish, -renounce, resign, sacrifice, scrap, surrender, terminate, waive, wrap, yield (≠ begin, commence, continue, gentrify, keep, maintain, preserve, renew, reopen, restart, resume, start, stay, support, sustain, uphold)
ABASE (/): bastardize, befoul, begrime, bestialize, blemish, canker, cheapen, contaminate, corrupt, damage, debase, debauch, deface, defile, demoralize, deprave, depreciate, destroy, deteriorate, dilute, dirty, disgrace, dishonor, downgrade, flaw, foul, harm, harshen, humble, humiliate, hurt, impair, lessen, mar, mutate, pervert, poison, pollute, profane, prostitute, ruin, shame, spoil, stain, suborn, subvert, sully, taint, tarnish, thin, vitiate, warp, weaken, wreck (≠ ameliorate, amend, better, clarify, clean, cleanse, correct, elevate, enhance, enrich, improve, optimize, perfect, purify, rarefy, rectify, refine, reform, respect, restore, upgrade, uplift)
ABASE (/): abash, affront, badmouth, belittle, blackguard, castigate, censure, chasten, cheapen, condemn, confound, confuse, criticize, damn, debase, decry, defame, defile, degrade, demean, demonize, denounce, depreciate, detract, diminish, discomfit, disconcert, -discount, discredit, disgrace, dishonor, disparage, downplay, embarrass, execrate, faze, fluster, foul, humble, humiliate, insult, libel, lower, malign, minimize, mortify, nonplus, pillory, rattle, ridicule, shame, sink, slander, smirch (≠ advance, aggrandize, applaud, boast, boost, canonize, celebrate, commend, compliment, congratulate, dignify, ennoble, enshrine, enthrone, exalt, extol, glorify, heroicize, heroize, highlight, honor, hype, idealize, magnify, praise, promote, recognize, romanticize, salute, sentimentalize, spotlight, tout, uplift)
ABDUCT (←): bind, bogart, bundle, capture, catch, disappear, enslave, entrap, grab, hijack, kidnap, lure, nab, pluck, ransom, remove, rustle, seize, shanghai, snatch, spirit, steal, take, trap, waylay (≠ aid, defend, deliver, guard, house, protect, ransom, recover, redeem, release, rescue, restore, return, save, secure, shelter, shield, stash)
ABET (→): activate, advance, brew, cultivate, detonate, encourage, energize, enliven, excite, ferment, fire, foment, forward, foster, further, galvanize, incite, inflame, inspire, instigate, invigorate, liven, motivate, nourish, nurture, pick, promote, provoke, quicken, raise, rouse, set, sow, stimulate, stir, trigger, vitalize (≠ allay, bridle, calm, check, confound, confuse, counteract, curb, deactivate, discourage, hold, inhibit, quiet, regulate, rein, repress, restrain, settle, soothe, stagnate, stifle, still, strangle, subdue, tame, tranquilize)
ABET (+): advance, advise, advocate, aid, assist, attend, back, benefit, bolster, boost, buttress, champion, comfort, condone, counsel, deliver, ease, embolden, encourage, endorse, energize, facilitate, favor, forward, foster, further, goad, guide, hearten, help, incite, inspire, instigate, kindle, launch, mentor, midwife, motivate, nurture, oblige, patronize, prod, profit, promote, prop, provoke, reinforce, rescue, sanction, save, second, serve, sponsor, spur, strengthen, succor, support, sustain, urge (≠ baffle, -balk, bar, block, constrain, counter, damage, delay, -desert, -deter, disappoint, discourage, disfavor, dishearten, dissuade, fail, foil, -frustrate, hamper, handicap, harm, hinder, hold, hurt, impede, incommode, inconvenience, inhibit, injure, monkey-wrench, muzzle, obstruct, oppose, -prevent, repress, restrain, retard, sabotage, scotch, scupper, shelve, short-circuit, stifle, straiten, strangle, stunt, stymie, subvert, -thwart)
ABOLISH (/): abnegate, abrogate, annihilate, annul, atomize, -blank, bulldoze, -cancel, decimate, deep-six, delete, demolish, -deny, desolate, destroy, devastate, disavow, disintegrate, dismantle, dismiss, dissolve, divorce, efface, eliminate, end, eradicate, erase, expunge, exterminate, extinguish, extirpate, flatten, invalidate, level, -negate, neutralize, -nullify, obliterate, overturn, pulverize, quash, raze, refute, -repudiate, retract, revoke, scotch, scrap, smash, snuff, stop, suppress, terminate, topple, undo, uproot, vaporize, -veto, vitiate, -void, wreck (≠ authorize, begin, brainstorm, bring, build, catalyze, commence, create, enact, establish, fashion, forge, form, found, generate, greenlight, hatch, inaugurate, induce, initiate, institute, introduce, launch, legislate, make, notarize, ordain, retain, shape, spawn, survive, weather)
-ABORT (/): -abandon, abrogate, annul, -cancel, check, conclude, countermand, -discontinue, drop, end, fail, finish, -frustrate, -halt, interrupt, invalidate, -negate, -nullify, recall, recant, relinquish, repeal, -rescind, retract, reverse, revoke, scrap, scratch, scrub, shorten, stop, surrender, suspend, terminate, -thwart, -void, withdraw (≠ begin, commence, continue, engage, establish, initiate, instigate, institute, keep, launch, originate, pioneer, pledge, promise, prompt, start, undertake)
ABRADE (/): bite, chafe, chew, coarsen, corrode, disintegrate, dissolve, eat, erase, erode, excoriate, file, fray, frazzle, fret, gall, gnaw, grate, graze, grind, hone, irritate, nibble, rasp, reduce, rub, sandblast, sandpaper, scour, scrape, scratch, scuff, sharpen, shave, wear, whet, wipe (≠ aid, alleviate, assist, assuage, butter, calm, comfort, content, ease, fix, grease, heal, lube, lubricate, mend, oil, placate, polish, rectify, shine, smooth, soften, soothe, wax)
ABRIDGE (/): abate, abbreviate, abstract, compress, concentrate, condense, constrict, contract, curtail, cut, decrease, de-escalate, deflate, digest, diminish, dock, downsize, elide, encapsulate, epitomize, focus, generalize, lessen, lower, miniaturize, minimize, moderate, modify, pare, prune, recapitulate, reduce, retrench, shorten, shrink, slash, subtract, summarize, syncopate, taper, trim, truncate (≠ add, aggrandize, amplify, augment, balloon, boost, dilate, distend, elongate, enlarge, escalate, expand, expound, extend, heighten, increase, inflate, lengthen, maximize, prolong, protract, raise, stretch, supplement, swell)
ABROGATE (/): abnegate, abolish, -abort, annul, -avoid, axe, ban, call, -cancel, challenge, chop, contradict, countermand, cripple, -deny, disable, disallow, disavow, dismiss, disqualify, dissolve, drop, dump, eliminate, end, enjoin, eradicate, erase, -forbid, hinder, impair, incapacitate, invalidate, -negate, neutralize, null, -nullify, outlaw, override, overrule, overturn, -prohibit, quash, rebut, recall, refute, -reject, remove, repeal, -repudiate, -rescind, retract, reverse, revoke, scotch, scrap, stop, strike, suspend, undercut, undermine, vacate, -veto, vitiate, -void, withdraw (≠ allow, approve, authorize, command, confirm, decree, develop, enact, endorse, establish, formalize, foster, found, instigate, institute, introduce, legalize, legislate, legitimate, legitimize, mandate, order, pass, permit, prescribe, promulgate, ratify, reinstate, sanction, support, sustain, validate, warrant)
ABSOLVE (+): acquit, bless, cleanse, clear, condone, defend, defray, discharge, dismiss, exculpate, excuse, exempt, exonerate, expiate, forgive, free, hallow, justify, liberate, loose, -overlook, pardon, purge, purify, rationalize, redeem, redress, release, relieve, remit, revenge, sanctify, sanitize, spare, spring, tolerate, unburden, vindicate, wash, whitewash (≠ accuse, arraign, avenge, blame, castigate, charge, chasten, chastise, condemn, convict, defame, denounce, denunciate, doom, fault, finger, frame, implicate, imprison, incriminate, indict, penalize, punish, reprove, resent, revile, reward, satisfy, scapegoat, sentence)
ABSORB (←): accept, access, acquire, admit, amalgamate, blend, combine, commingle, consume, coopt, devour, digest, drink, eat, embody, engorge, engulf, envelop, fuse, get, gobble, gulp, guzzle, imbibe, incorporate, ingest, inhale, inspire, integrate, intermingle, merge, mingle, pocket, process, quaff, receive, sip, slurp, sniff, sponge, suck, swallow, swig, swill, take (≠ augment, blackball, build, conserve, disperse, dissipate, eject, emit, exhale, expel, exude, fortify, increase, peck, pick, preserve, protect, recoup, -refuse, reinforce, -reject, replace, restore, save, spew, splutter, -spurn, vent, vomit)
ABSORB (←): allure, amuse, attract, beguile, bemuse, bewitch, busy, captivate, catch, charm, concern, consume, distract, divert, employ, enchant, engage, engross, entertain, enthrall, fascinate, fill, grip, hog, hold, hypnotize, immerse, interest, intrigue, involve, mesmerize, monopolize, obsess, occupy, possess, preoccupy, rivet, stimulate (≠ annoy, bore, disgust, displease, distract, frustrate, irk, jade, offend, repel, revolt, tire, vex, weary) (¿) ABSTRACTION ALERT. Concrete goals essential!
ABSORB (+): assimilate, catch, collect, compile, comprehend, coopt, digest, discover, follow, gain, gather, glean, grasp, grok, incorporate, integrate, internalize, learn, master, overhear, realize, receive, sense, study, suss, understand (≠ -deny, forget, misapprehend, misconceive, misconstrue, misdiagnose, misinterpret, misperceive, misread, miss, mistake, misunderstand, -neglect, -reject, -spurn) (¿) ABSTRACTION ALERT. Concrete goals essential!
ABSORB (+): acclimatize, accommodate, acculturate, accustom, adapt, adjust, adopt, amalgamate, assimilate, blend, combine, commingle, condition, coopt, embody, enculturate, fuse, habituate, include, incorporate, integrate, intermingle, merge, mingle, mix, naturalize, reunite, unite (≠ alienate, banish, bar, contrast, diffuse, eliminate, -exclude, exile, expel, isolate, juxtapose, -omit, orphan, oust, -prevent, -prohibit, replace, -repudiate, resist, scatter, seclude, segregate)
ABUSE (←): bamboozle, bleed, bully, cheat, coerce, commandeer, commercialize, commodify, compel, con, deceive, dragoon, embezzle, exploit, extort, fleece, gazump, gull, harass, impose, leverage, manipulate, milk, mistreat, overcharge, play, pressure, presume, skin, soak, stick, tap, use, work (≠ aid, assist, benefit, guard, help, honor, -neglect, nurture, preserve, protect, respect, restore, save, support)
ABUSE (/): bastardize, bestialize, cannibalize, consume, corrupt, debase, degrade, depredate, desecrate, dissipate, exhaust, exploit, fritter, misapply, mishandle, mismanage, misuse, overburden, overtax, overwork, pervert, profane, prostitute, ruin, spoil, squander, taint, twist, waste (≠ apply, benefit, bless, defend, employ, esteem, guard, preserve, prize, respect, revere, support, use, utilize)
ABUSE (/): anguish, assault, attack, batter, beat, brutalize, bully, burn, club, corrupt, crucify, damage, defile, degrade, deprave, desecrate, exploit, harass, harm, hit, hurt, ill-treat, impair, injure, maim, maltreat, manhandle, mar, menace, mishandle, mistreat, misuse, molest, oppress, outrage, persecute, pollute, rape, ruin, sandbag, soil, spoil, sully, taint, torment, torture, total, trample, use, victimize, violate, wound, wrong (≠ adore, baby, cherish, coddle, defend, favor, foster, gratify, heal, help, honor, humor, indulge, mollycoddle, nurse, nurture, pamper, pity, preserve, protect, rescue, respect, revere, spoil, treasure)
ABUSE (/): abase, affront, antagonize, assail, attack, backbite, badmouth, bait, bash, belabor, belittle, berate, besmirch, betray, blackguard, blaspheme, blast, blemish, browbeat, bully, bullyrag, calumniate, castigate, chastise, chide, criticize, curse, damn, debase, decry, defame, demean, demonize, denigrate, diminish, -discount, discredit, disfavor, disgrace, dishonor, disparage, excoriate, execrate, flannel, flatter, harangue, harass, harry, humble, humiliate, imprecate, impugn, insult, knock, lambaste, libel, malign, minimize, mortify, nag, offend, oppress, persecute, pillory, profane, rail, rebuke, reprimand, reproach, revile, ride, ridicule, savage, scathe, scold, shame, slam, slander, slap, slate, -slight, slur, smear, -snub, taunt, traduce, trash, upbraid, victimize, vilify, vituperate, whip, wrong, zing (≠ acclaim, admire, adore, adulate, amuse, approve, boost, cajole, charm, cherish, commend, compliment, court, deify, delight, dignify, esteem, exalt, glorify, hail, hero-worship, idolize, laud, lionize, pity, praise, retort, revere, reverence, soap, support, sweet-talk, venerate, woo, worship)
ACCELERATE (→): advance, aid, bundle, dispatch, drive, ease, encourage, expedite, facilitate, fast-forward, fast-track, forward, frogmarch, further, goad, gun, hasten, hurry, impel, march, midwife, precipitate, prod, promote, propel, push, quicken, race, railroad, rev, rush, spur, stimulate, stir, urge, whisk (≠ -abort, brake, burden, choke, conclude, cripple, decelerate, delay, encumber, hamper, hamstring, hinder, hobble, impede, kill, obstruct, postpone, prolong, restrain, retard, shelve, short-circuit, slow, stall, stay, stifle, still, stop, tax, terminate, -thwart, weight)
ACCENTUATE (+): accent, advertise, amplify, assert, belabor, bolster, boost, center, concentrate, deepen, display, elevate, emphasize, escalate, exaggerate, exhibit, favor, feature, flaunt, focus, foreground, heighten, highlight, hype, identify, illuminate, increase, intensify, magnify, mark, maximize, overemphasize, overplay, oversell, overstate, overstress, pinpoint, plug, present, press, prioritize, promote, publicize, punctuate, push, reinforce, sharpen, show, spotlight, strengthen, stress, underline, underscore, weight (≠ abate, -avoid, belittle, bury, conceal, cover, curb, decrease, deemphasize, diminish, -discount, disparage, -disregard, downplay, -eschew, hide, -ignore, lessen, lighten, marginalize, mask, minimize, miss, mitigate, moderate, muffle, -neglect, obscure, obstruct, -omit, -overlook, quiet, reduce, sideline, silence, stifle, subdue, subordinate, temper, undercut, underemphasize, undermine, underrate, understate, weaken)
ACCEPT (←): abide, absorb, access, acquire, admit, adopt, assimilate, authenticate, authorize, bear, brook, confirm, corroborate, countenance, devour, eat, embrace, endure, engorge, gain, gather, get, gobble, grasp, greenlight, gulp, import, incorporate, ingest, inhale, inspire, integrate, internalize, legalize, obtain, okay, permit, pocket, procure, ratify, receive, sanction, secure, shoulder, stand, stomach, support, sustain, swallow, sweat, take, tolerate, underwrite, warrant, welcome (≠ accord, adjure, bestow, challenge, combat, comp, contest, counteract, countercheck, -decline, -deny, disallow, disapprove, discard, donate, eliminate, fight, give, oppose, protest, -refuse, -reject, repel, resist, scrap, -spurn, tender, tithe, -veto, withstand, yield)
ACCEPT (+): acclaim, admire, adore, applaud, approve, back, bear, bless, commend, congratulate, countenance, endure, enjoy, favor, laud, love, okay, praise, recommend, respect, salute, stomach, support, sustain, tolerate, uphold (≠ blacklist, boo, censure, condemn, criticize, damn, denounce, deprecate, depreciate, -detest, disfavor, disparage, fulminate, -hate, -loathe, malign, mind, mock, oppose, ridicule)
ACCEPT (+): acknowledge, admit, affirm, allow, approve, assert, assume, assure, attest, believe, buy, certify, claim, conclude, contend, corroborate, credit, declare, deduce, endorse, express, gather, hold, infer, maintain, pledge, presume, proclaim, profess, promise, prove, ratify, sanction, state, stipulate, submit, support, suppose, sustain, swallow, take, testify, trust, understand, validate, verify, warrant, welcome (≠ allege, challenge, consult, convince, cross-examine, debate, debunk, demonize, demonstrate, disbelieve, discredit, dispute, distrust, doubt, grill, impugn, interrogate, interview, mistrust, -negate, -nullify, pillory, question, -reject, -renounce, ridicule, scruple, suspect, wonder)
ACCEPT (+): accede, adopt, advocate, assume, back, bear, champion, condone, embrace, endorse, espouse, integrate, obey, observe, shoulder, support, undertake, uphold (≠ -abandon, abjure, -avoid, condemn, -decline, detour, disavow, disclaim, -disown, -forsake, -negate, offer, recant, -refuse, -reject, relinquish, -renounce, -repudiate, retract, spitball, -spurn, volunteer, withdraw)
ACCEPT (+): abide, absorb, allow, bear, brave, brook, condone, countenance, endure, face, follow, hack, handle, meet, obey, permit, pocket, reconcile, respect, stand, stomach, suffer, support, sustain, swallow, sweat, take, tolerate, wear (≠ -avoid, bandy, -bypass, -circumvent, combat, contest, counteract, -decline, dismiss, -dodge, -elude, -escape, -evade, fight, miss, oppose, -refuse, -reject, -repudiate, resist, -spurn)
ACCESS (→): crack, crash, decode, discover, enter, gate-crash, infiltrate, infringe, invade, locate, open, penetrate, pierce, reach, read, retrieve, solve, trespass, uncover, unearth, unlock, use, utilize (≠ -avoid, banish, block, botch, bury, cordon, depart, -exclude, hide, hinder, -ignore, leave, lose, miss, oust, shut)
ACCLAIM (+): accredit, acknowledge, admire, adore, adulate, aggrandize, applaud, appreciate, approve, ballyhoo, beatify, blandish, boost, celebrate, cheer, commend, compliment, congratulate, deify, dignify, distinguish, elevate, emblazon, encourage, endorse, ennoble, eulogize, exalt, extol, favor, fête, flannel, flatter, glorify, gold-star, gratify, hail, heighten, high-five, honor, hype, idealize, idolize, laud, lift, lionize, magnify, plug, praise, promote, raise, recognize, recommend, respect, revere, reverence, reward, romanticize, salute, sanction, stroke, support, thank, toast, tout, trumpet, uplift, value, venerate, welcome (≠ abuse, admonish, badmouth, belittle, berate, blame, blast, boo, castigate, censure, chastise, chide, condemn, criticize, damn, debase, decry, demean, demonize, denigrate, denounce, deride, -detest, diminish, discredit, disgrace, disparage, disrespect, excoriate, fault, finger, frame, fulminate, heckle, humiliate, insult, jeer, keelhaul, knock, lambaste, malign, minimize, mock, neg, pan, pillory, rebuke, reprimand, reproach, revile, ridicule, rue, savage, scold, -scorn, -shun, skewer, slag, slam, -snub, vilify, wrong)
ACCOMMODATE (+): acclimate, acclimatize, accustom, acquaint, adapt, adjust, align, alter, arrange, array, attune, balance, bend, blend, calibrate, combine, compose, conciliate, condition, connect, convert, coordinate, correct, correlate, customize, defray, doctor, dovetail, edit, enable, equalize, equip, establish, even, facilitate, familiarize, fashion, fiddle, fine-tune, fit, fuse, gear, habituate, harden, harmonize, integrate, inure, join, key, match, merge, midwife, model, modify, naturalize, orchestrate, order, orient, orientate, pace, pair, pattern, phase, prepare, prime, proportion, readapt, readjust, ready, recast, reclaim, reconceive, reconceptualize, reconcile, recycle, redesign, redevelop, redo, reengineer, refashion, refit, refocus, register, regularize, regulate, rehearse, reintegrate, reinvent, rejigger, remake, remodel, reorient, restore, rethink, retool, reunite, revamp, revise, rework, rig, right, root, season, settle, shape, smooth, square, standardize, suit, synchronize, synthesize, tailor, time, toughen, transform, tune, unify, unite (≠ alienate, botch, challenge, confuse, contradict, counteract, damage, disaffect, disarray, disorder, disorganize, disrupt, disturb, estrange, hamper, harm, impede, inconvenience, isolate, mar, misadjust, obstruct, occlude, -omit, oppose, sabotage, scupper, skew, tax, -thwart, trouble, undermine, upset)
ACCOMMODATE (+): abet, aid, appease, assist, attend, boost, cheer, coddle, comfort, conciliate, delight, empower, encourage, equip, favor, gladden, grace, gratify, help, humor, indulge, mollify, mollycoddle, nurture, oblige, overindulge, pacify, pamper, placate, please, propitiate, provide, reassure, relieve, satisfy, soothe, succor, supply, support (≠ bother, burden, constrain, -desert, disappoint, discommode, disfavor, disoblige, disturb, encumber, fail, -frustrate, hamper, hamstring, hinder, hobble, impede, incommode, inconvenience, obstruct, orphan, -ostracize, oust, restrain, sabotage, subvert, -thwart, trouble)
ACCOMMODATE (+): barrack, bestow, billet, board, bunk, carry, chamber, contain, domicile, embattle, enclose, encompass, enfold, ensconce, fit, foster, garrison, harbor, help, hold, home, house, lodge, niche, place, quarter, roof, room, seat, secure, shed, shelter, stable, take, tent, welcome (≠ alienate, ban, banish, bar, blackball, deport, eject, evict, exorcise, expel, isolate, -ostracize, oust, quarantine, -reject, remove, seclude, -shun)
ACCOMPANY (+): accessorize, add, adorn, affix, attach, attend, bring, chaperone, chauffeur, conduct, convey, convoy, defend, escort, follow, garnish, guard, guide, lead, partner, pilot, protect, second, see, shadow, shepherd, squire, steer, supplement, tag, tail, usher, walk (≠ -abandon, -desert, -ditch, drop, dump, -flee, follow, -forsake, jilt, leave, maroon, oppose, -quit, -reject, -shun, skip, -snub, strand, withdraw)
ACCOST (→): address, ambush, annoy, approach, attack, bother, brace, buttonhole, challenge, confront, cross, dare, detain, entice, face, flag, greet, hail, -halt, high-five, importune, inveigle, molest, proposition, salute, solicit, stop, strike, waylay (≠ accompany, aid, assure, befriend, defend, deflect, -dodge, -elude, encourage, -evade, guard, help, -ignore, insulate, invite, protect, rescue, retort, safeguard, save, -sidestep, support, welcome)
ACCUMULATE (←): accrue, acquire, aggregate, amalgamate, amass, archive, arrange, assemble, ball, band, batch, bunch, cache, cluster, collate, collect, combine, compile, concentrate, congregate, connect, corral, double, download, expand, gain, garner, gather, glean, group, grow, heap, herd, hive, hoard, incorporate, increase, join, link, lump, mass, merge, multiply, muster, organize, pack, pile, pool, press, procure, profit, raise, rally, scavenge, stack, stockpile, store, swarm, systematize, throng, treble, triple, unite, wrangle (≠ decrease, diffuse, diminish, disband, disintegrate, dismiss, dispel, disperse, dissipate, dissolve, divide, lessen, parcel, portion, scatter, send, separate, sever, spend, split, squander, waste)
ACCUSE (/): allege, arraign, arrest, attack, attribute, betray, blame, book, brand, castigate, censure, challenge, charge, chastise, chide, cite, condemn, confront, criticize, damn, defame, denounce, disparage, expose, fault, finger, frame, impeach, implicate, impugn, incriminate, inculpate, indict, libel, litigate, name, out, prosecute, rebuke, report, reproach, reprove, resent, scapegoat, scold, slander, slur, sue, summon, tax (≠ absolve, acquit, appeal, champion, clear, defend, exculpate, excuse, exonerate, forgive, justify, legalize, pardon, protect, release, remit, shrive, spare, support, vindicate)
ACCUSTOM (+): accommodate, acquaint, adapt, adjust, advise, anchor, apprise, attune, balance, brief, calibrate, case-harden, center, coach, condition, discipline, educate, enlighten, expose, familiarize, ground, habituate, housebreak, housetrain, inform, initiate, instruct, introduce, inure, mentor, orient, orientate, present, reacquaint, school, season, subject, tame, tell, train, warn (≠ addle, alarm, baffle, bother, brutalize, bug, confuse, deceive, discombobulate, distort, distress, fabricate, gaslight, hide, misinform, mislead, panic, perplex, puzzle, savage, terrorize, unnerve, upset, vex, withhold, worry)
ACE (→): beat, best, clobber, conquer, dazzle, dominate, impress, master, outguess, outmaneuver, outperform, outsmart, outwit, overcome, overwhelm, rout, steamroller, stun, trounce, trump, vanquish (≠ bobble, bomb, botch, bugger, bungle, choke, disappoint, fail, flub, flunk, fumble, lose, miss, muff, pass, skip, subvert)
ACHIEVE (→): accomplish, acquire, actualize, answer, attain, claim, complete, conclude, consummate, crest, deliver, discharge, dispatch, earn, effect, effectuate, enact, end, execute, fill, finish, fulfill, gain, get, implement, keep, manage, manifest, meet, negotiate, obey, observe, obtain, perfect, perform, please, procure, produce, qualify, reach, realize, resolve, satisfy, score, seal, settle, sign, solve, suit, win (≠ -abandon, -abort, -avoid, begin, breach, -cancel, commence, concede, destroy, displease, -disregard, dissatisfy, drop, fail, forfeit, forget, -halt, -ignore, leave, lose, miss, -neglect, -overlook, pass, question, scant, scrimp, skimp, start, stop, surrender, violate) (¿) ABSTRACTION ALERT. Concrete goals essential!
ACKNOWLEDGE (→): accede, accept, address, admit, affirm, allow, announce, approve, avow, betray, blab, blurt, break, broadcast, bulletin, certify, communicate, concede, confess, confirm, declare, defend, disclose, divulge, endorse, expose, grant, greet, hail, high-five, impart, inform, leak, mark, notice, out, own, proclaim, profess, publish, rate, ratify, receive, recognize, reveal, spill, squeal, support, talk, telegraph, tell, thank, unburden, unload, unveil, warn, welcome (≠ belittle, conceal, contradict, cover, debate, -deny, disallow, disavow, disclaim, -discount, dismiss, -disown, dispute, -disregard, distrust, doubt, forget, gainsay, hide, -ignore, impugn, -negate, obscure, -omit, -overlook, rebut, refute, -reject, -repudiate, scruple, -snub, -spurn, suspect, veil) (¿) ABSTRACTION ALERT. Concrete goals essential!
ACQUAINT (→): accustom, advertise, advise, announce, appraise, apprise, befriend, brief, clue, coach, communicate, confess, disclose, divulge, educate, enlighten, familiarize, habituate, inform, instruct, notify, reveal, school, season, teach, tell, train, tutor (≠ -avoid, baffle, befuddle, conceal, confuse, disguise, -disregard, forget, hide, -ignore, mask, misinform, mislead, obliterate, obscure, -overlook, pass, -reject, veil)
ACQUIRE (←): access, accomplish, accumulate, achieve, amass, annex, appropriate, attain, bag, buy, capture, carry, catch, clear, collect, colonize, compile, cop, corral, debit, draw, earn, gain, garner, gather, get, glean, grab, gross, hustle, import, inherit, invade, land, make, net, notch, obtain, occupy, pick, procure, promote, pull, purchase, realize, reap, recapture, receive, regain, scavenge, score, secure, snag, source, stockpile, take, wangle, win (≠ -abandon, accord, bandy, comp, contribute, -ditch, drop, dump, forfeit, forgo, -forsake, furnish, give, grant, hand, hard-sell, jettison, junk, leverage, lose, misplace, miss, offer, pay, peddle, pimp, prostitute, relinquish, sell, spare, stock, supply, surrender, tithe, toss, volunteer, yield)
ACQUIT (+): absolve, affirm, champion, cleanse, clear, corroborate, defend, defray, deliver, discharge, dismiss, disprove, exculpate, excuse, exempt, exonerate, forgive, free, justify, liberate, mitigate, pardon, purge, purify, redeem, redress, refute, rehabilitate, release, relieve, remit, reprieve, shield, spare, support, vindicate, warrant, wash, whitewash (≠ accuse, allege, blame, castigate, charge, condemn, convict, denounce, discipline, fault, frame, implicate, imprison, impugn, incriminate, indict, litigate, prosecute, punish, reprove, revile, ruin, scapegoat, sentence)
ACTIVATE (→): accelerate, actuate, advance, animate, arouse, awaken, beget, begin, breed, bring, catalyze, charge, crank, create, cue, cultivate, deploy, develop, discharge, drive, electrify, enact, encourage, energize, engender, enliven, establish, excite, expedite, father, fire, forward, foster, found, fuel, further, galvanize, generate, ignite, impel, inaugurate, incite, induce, initiate, innovate, instigate, institute, introduce, invigorate, invoke, jump-start, kick-start, launch, make, mobilize, motivate, move, nourish, nurture, pioneer, power, prioritize, produce, promote, prompt, propel, prostrate, provoke, push, quicken, reactivate, reboot, recharge, release, render, revitalize, rouse, run, rush, set, spark, spawn, speed, spur, start, stimulate, stir, switch, trigger, trip, vitalize, wake (≠ abolish, arrest, -avoid, block, brake, check, control, cripple, crush, curb, cut, dampen, deactivate, decelerate, delay, demolish, demotivate, destroy, -deter, disable, discourage, dissuade, end, extinguish, -halt, hamper, hamstring, hinder, hobble, impair, impede, inactivate, inhibit, jam, kill, limit, liquidate, -prevent, quash, quell, quench, repress, restrain, restrict, sabotage, shelve, short-circuit, slake, slow, smother, snuff, squash, squelch, stale, stall, stick, stifle, still, stop, stunt, stymie, subdue, suppress, terminate, -thwart, undermine)
ADAPT (+): acclimate, acclimatize, accommodate, accustom, acquaint, adjust, align, alter, amend, approximate, attune, automate, bend, calibrate, case-harden, change, computerize, condition, convert, correct, customize, diversify, doctor, edit, embellish, embroider, emend, equalize, equip, establish, exchange, familiarize, fashion, fiddle, fine-tune, fit, game, gear, harden, harmonize, improve, inure, jerry-rig, match, mechanize, metamorphose, militarize, model, modernize, modify, mold, motorize, orient, overhaul, pace, pattern, phase, prepare, prime, qualify, radicalize, ready, realign, recalibrate, recast, reclaim, reconceive, reconceptualize, recycle, redesign, redevelop, redo, reengineer, refashion, refit, refocus, register, regulate, rehearse, reimagine, reinvent, rejigger, remake, remodel, reorient, reshape, restore, restructure, rethink, retool, retrofit, revamp, revise, revolutionize, rework, rig, right, root, sculpt, season, settle, shape, shift, shuffle, skew, square, substitute, suit, supplant, swap, switch, tailor, tone, toughen, transfigure, transform, transmute, transpose, tune, turn, tweak, update, vary, weaponize, wiggle, wriggle (≠ abide, -abort, anesthetize, bolster, brace, complete, conclude, conserve, continue, deaden, debilitate, destroy, disable, disqualify, dull, endure, finalize, finish, fix, fortify, freeze, hamper, hamstring, harden, hinder, hold, immobilize, incapacitate, keep, leave, lock, maintain, misadjust, numb, paralyze, restrain, retain, set, settle, stabilize, steady, stop, strengthen, sustain, transfix, weather)
ADD (+): accumulate, adjoin, affix, aggrandize, amplify, annex, append, attach, augment, beef, blend, boost, combine, complement, complete, compound, deepen, elongate, enforce, enhance, enlarge, escalate, expand, extend, fasten, fix, furnish, gather, graft, heighten, hike, hitch, improve, include, increase, infuse, inject, insert, intensify, interfuse, introduce, join, lengthen, magnify, maximize, mix, multiply, pad, piggyback, prolong, protract, raise, reinforce, spike, stockpile, strengthen, supplement, supply, sweeten, swell, tag, tie, unify, unite (≠ abate, abbreviate, abridge, amputate, compress, condense, constrict, contract, curtail, cut, debit, decrease, deduct, detach, diminish, disconnect, disjoin, dissolve, excise, extract, lessen, lop, lower, miniaturize, minimize, reduce, release, remove, separate, sever, shorten, shrink, subtract, sunder, take, truncate, unfasten, withdraw)
ADD (+): analyze, anatomize, appraise, assess, audit, calculate, check, cipher, compute, count, determine, divide, enumerate, evaluate, examine, figure, multiply, number, reckon, recompute,