Wordcounter: An Invaluable Tool to Prevent Repetition.

The sample I used for this exercise is the next chapter in my romantic thriller, which will appear tomorrow. I thought it might be a useful and practical way of demonstrating the value of the Wordcounter.
In this sample, which is 5,383 words long, the word ‘just’ appears 25 times. I hadn’t come across this tool at the time of writing and, although the piece has been through 3 different edits by well-read and well-educated people, none spotted that overuse. Fortunately, many of the examples appear in dialogue, where it reflects the everyday usage of the speaker. However, there are other sentences or paragraphs where ‘just’ could easily have been substituted by ‘only’ or by a small change in construction.
Other frequent uses appear in three character names, which are instances where the repeated word will rarely be able to be substituted. By the way, when you use this tool, you’ll notice that the results are returned without capital letters. I’ve inserted capitals to make the demonstration clearer. And the word ‘car’ is a star in this case simply because the chapter is set in a driving school situation.
So, a very useful tool and one I wish I’d discovered earlier. I’ll certainly use it for everything I write in the future. It has the advantage of being mechanical and therefore indifferent to a writer’s particular preferences. It spots those overused words and points them out with brutal efficiency.
I’d certainly recommend this tool and would like to publicly thank its creator, Steven Morgan Friedman.You’ll see there are a couple of other tools available on the site. I haven’t yet tried these, but will do in the future and let you know what I find. Of course, you could always try them for yourself.
The text shown below is what appears on the website:
Wordcounter ranks the most frequently used words in any given body of text. Use this to see what words you overuse (is everything a "solution" for you?) or maybe just to find some keywords from a document. (New! - See the Political Vocabulary Analysis - to try to predict if a document has political leanings!)
Wordcounter is useful for writers, editors, students, and anyone who thinks that they might be speaking redundantly or repetitively -- and it's free! Eventually, I'm going to expand it so that you can upload documents, but not yet.
If you enjoy the Wordcounter, you might enjoy my new web page, Smugopedia - pretend you know better. It's smartly weird and funny. Top of FormEnter the body of text here (to count & rank the word frequency):
Include Small Words ("the", "it", etc)? No -- exclude them Yes -- include them
Use Only Roots (group variations together)? Yes (beta) No
How Many Words should I list? 25 50 100 200
Bottom of Form
Here are your results... Word Frequency just 25 I’d 21 know 20 Shirley 20 it’ 19 you’re 18 sex 17 Tony 17 car 16 very 15 ‘I 15 you’ 15 I’m 15 Faith 14 case 14 don’t 14 go 13 test 13 time 13 back 13 went 13 look 13 down 12 take 12 one 12
http://www.wordcounter.com/

Published on August 23, 2012 00:52
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