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Strong Verb Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

A strong verb generator hands you vivid verbs that do the work a weak verb-and-adverb pair only gestures at. Choose how many you want and it returns a shuffled set — "lunged" instead of moved quickly, "whispered" instead of said quietly, "devoured" instead of ate fast. Writers and editors use it because adverbs are often a sign that the verb is not pulling its weight; replacing "walked tiredly" with "trudged" makes a sentence shorter, sharper, and more cinematic at once. Each entry pairs a strong verb with the weak phrase it replaces, so you can spot the pattern in your own drafts. Scan your writing for verb-plus-adverb combinations, swap in a precise verb where one exists, and feel the prose tighten. Not every adverb is a crime, but a strong verb almost always beats a propped-up weak one.

Read the complete guide — 4 min read

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How to use

  1. Choose your options above
  2. Click Generate
  3. Copy your result

Detailed instructions

  1. Choose how many strong verbs you want.
  2. Generate a set and scan your draft for weak pairs.
  3. Swap in a precise verb where one fits.
  4. Reread to confirm the sentence got sharper.

Use Cases

  • Replacing weak verb-and-adverb pairs in a draft
  • Tightening flabby prose in revision
  • Making action and description more vivid
  • Cutting unnecessary adverbs
  • Building a stronger verb vocabulary

Tips

  • Hunt for verb-plus-adverb pairs to replace.
  • Keep adverbs that add genuinely new meaning.
  • Match the verb's intensity to the moment.
  • Favour precise over merely dramatic.

FAQ

are adverbs always bad

No. The problem is propping up a weak verb with one — "ran quickly" when "sprinted" exists. Adverbs that add genuinely new information are fine; the redundant ones are the target.

how do i find weak verbs to replace

Scan for verb-plus-adverb pairs and for vague verbs like went, got, and moved. Where a single precise verb captures the same action, the swap almost always tightens the sentence.

can a verb be too strong

Yes — an overwrought verb draws attention to itself. Match the verb to the moment; a quiet scene rarely wants verbs that detonate. Aim for precise, not merely dramatic.

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