write the 110 examples of
strong verbs...
Answers
Answer:
Do you ever wonder why a grammatically correct sentence you’ve written just lies there like a dead fish?
I sure have.
Your sentence might even be full of those adjectives and adverbs your teachers and loved ones so admired in your writing when you were a kid.
But still the sentence doesn’t work.
Something simple I learned from The Elements of Style years ago changed the way I write and added verve to my prose. The authors of that little bible of style said: “Write with nouns and verbs, not with adjectives and adverbs.”
Even Mark Twain was quoted, regarding adjectives: “When in doubt, strike it out.”
That’s not to say there’s no place for adjectives. I used three in the title and first paragraph of this post alone.
The point is that good writing is more about well-chosen nouns and strong verbs than it is about adjectives and adverbs, regardless what you were told as a kid.
There’s no quicker win for you and your manuscript than ferreting out and eliminating flabby verbs and replacing them with vibrant ones.
Answer:
Strong Verbs Examples
Blow > blew (past tense), blown (past participle)
Break > broke (past tense), broken (past participle)
Do > did (past tense), done (past participle)
Feed > fed (past tense and past particle)
Lie (down) > lay (past tense), lain (past participle)
Speak > spoke (past tense), spoken (past participle)
Explanation:
mark me as brainliest