Chinese, asked by Anonymous, 11 months ago

ab gussa aa raha h last baar puch rahi hu dialogue writting ka baare ma kich batao koi . examples ka saath ​

Answers

Answered by amalbinu20
2

the format for dialogue writing is :

Person A : ..................................................

                 ..................................................

Person B : .................................................

                 .................................................


Anonymous: ok can you tell me that it is written in passive form
amalbinu20: No passive forms, only active forms as it is a conversation between two or more people. But when we narrate the situation while writing dialogue then we need to use passive forms only in the narrating sections.
Answered by Tamash
2

Hi Gussa queen,

YOUR QUERY:

Dialogue-writing:

How to do it perfectly?

  • Have a purpose for every single dialogue, a logical one. It might as well have an objective implication. For example, ask logical questions like – What does this say about my character? What characteristic am I painting with this dialogue? Is this dialogue moving the story?

  • Try not overuse dialogues by writing dialogues that lead to no logical conclusions. Basically, keep filler dialogues as less as possible. The more interesting and information giving your dialogues are, the longer the reading span becomes of your dialogue.

  • Use narration in between dialogues to abstain from stray dialogue-writing. Keep it short and simple. Create movement in the plot using actions and descriptions between dialogues.

  • Keep it as real and closer to the characters as possible. Maintain the same theme or purpose throughout. Dialogues are supposed to feel real conversations. The less fake you make them, the better they sound.

  • Convey a point through your dialogue-writing. Don’t repeat the same shade you painted in one dialogue into another. If you have established that A is tired, you can take another dimension to it instead of re-iterating directly the same point again and again.

  • Keep the writing catchy and full of twists. Don’t forget the element of surprise is the backbone of good dialogue-writing. Try to keep the characters different, bring in one strong emotion every now and then to keep the dialogue-writing catchy and engaging. Make resonating points that the readers can relate to.

  • That brings us to the end of our chapter. Hope you enjoyed reading this one. Try and see if you could capture an interesting incident this week and channelize it into some dialogue-writing. Happy writing!

Solved Question for You

Identify the correct dialogue:

Shivam: Are you going to the party tonight?

Tamash: No, I don’t think so. I am not feeling too well.

Jim: Oh, __________

  • I was sorry to hear you were sick.
  • I am sorry to hear that, I hope you get well soon.
  • Get well soon.
  • I am truly sorry to receive news of your ill health.

Answer: B. I am sorry to hear that, I hope you get well soon.

  • Hope you would like it..

Good luck

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