Cut Filler and Crutch Words to Streamline Your Story

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Image by tookapic from Pixabay

Filler and crutch words are the bane of any writer’s craft. Many of us could cut 10 percent from our manuscript by cutting out fluff words and rewriting a few sentences to add clarity.

Sometimes a filler word serves a purpose, but most of the time they are unnecessary. In a post on the Killzone blog, Sue Coletta offers a lot of good examples of junk words and phrases you should strive to eliminate from your writing. They include:

  • Filler words: just, then, that, so, well, really, very
  • Filter phrases: I believe, I thought, I felt
  • Unspecific words: Came, went, had

Lots of good examples in the article. Caveat: Coletta deploys the loathsome phrase “kill your darlings,” but rest assured: filters and fillers are not darlings. They are extraneous words that can be excised from your writing with almost no detriment to your story.