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Random Words by Part of Speech

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

A random words by part of speech generator solves a specific problem: getting exactly the word class you need, not a mixed bag you have to sort through. Writers use targeted noun or verb lists to build story prompts. Teachers pull adjective sets for grammar drills. Developers seed UI mockups and word-game dictionaries with vocabulary that actually reflects the intended data type. Set the part of speech to noun, verb, adjective, adverb, or mixed, choose a count up to 50, and generate. Mixed mode pulls from all four categories in one batch — useful for free-writing prompts or word-association warm-ups where variety matters more than consistency.

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How to use

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

Detailed instructions

  1. Open the Part of Speech dropdown and select noun, verb, adjective, adverb, or mixed depending on what your activity requires.
  2. Set the Number of Words field to the quantity you need, between 1 and 50.
  3. Click Generate to produce your word list instantly in the output panel.
  4. Review the results and click Generate again if you want a fresh set without changing your settings.
  5. Copy the word list and paste it directly into your worksheet, game file, or application.

Use Cases

  • Building single-part-of-speech grammar drills for ESL students focusing on one word class at a time
  • Seeding a Figma UI prototype with genuine noun labels instead of Lorem Ipsum placeholder text
  • Generating 20 base-form verbs to use as the root words in a conjugation worksheet
  • Populating a command parser or text adventure game with a categorised verb dictionary
  • Creating mad-libs templates in Notion or Google Docs with adjective and adverb slots pre-filled

Tips

  • Use 'adjective' mode with a count of five, then combine the output with a single generated noun to create quick, vivid character or setting descriptions.
  • When building a word game, generate verbs and nouns separately and keep them in separate columns — mixing parts of speech after generation gives you more control than using mixed mode.
  • Run two back-to-back batches with different parts of speech selected, then interleave the lists to create balanced sentence-construction exercises with known word ratios.
  • For vocabulary testing, generate a noun list first, then quiz students by asking them to produce a related adjective or verb — the indirect prompt is more challenging than a direct definition test.
  • If you are seeding a database with placeholder text, nouns alone produce more realistic-looking label or category data than mixed mode, which can output adverbs that look odd as field names.

FAQ

how do I get only nouns or only verbs from this generator

Open the Part of Speech dropdown and select the specific category you want — noun, verb, adjective, or adverb — then set your count and click Generate. Every word in the output will belong to that single class. Mixed mode is the only setting that combines all four categories in one batch.

are the verbs conjugated or in base form

Verbs are returned in their base (infinitive) form — think 'run', 'build', or 'consider'. If you need past tense or gerund forms, you'll conjugate them yourself. That base-form output is actually ideal for conjugation drills because it hands students the root word to work from.

what's the difference between mixed mode and picking a specific part of speech

A specific selection filters the entire output to one word class, so all 10 words will be nouns, or all 10 will be adjectives. Mixed mode draws randomly across all four categories, so a batch of 10 might include 3 nouns, 2 verbs, 4 adjectives, and 1 adverb. Use mixed when you want natural variety; use a specific selection when your exercise needs a homogeneous list.