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*sleeping*

@sleeping-ashtray

Ash (21, he/they), Ash_is_here on ao3, @bradleysass sleepiest fan

Other Words for "Look" + With meanings | List for writers

Many people create lists of synonyms for the word 'said,' but what about the word 'look'? Here are some synonyms that I enjoy using in my writing, along with their meanings for your reference. While all these words relate to 'look,' they each carry distinct meanings and nuances, so I thought it would be helpful to provide meanings for each one.

  1. Gaze - To look steadily and intently, especially in admiration or thought.
  2. Glance - A brief or hurried look.
  3. Peek - A quick and typically secretive look.
  4. Peer - To look with difficulty or concentration.
  5. Scan - To look over quickly but thoroughly.
  6. Observe - To watch carefully and attentively.
  7. Inspect - To look at closely in order to assess condition or quality.
  8. Stare - To look fixedly or vacantly at someone or something.
  9. Glimpse - To see or perceive briefly or partially.
  10. Eye - To look or stare at intently.
  11. Peruse - To read or examine something with great care.
  12. Scrutinize - To examine or inspect closely and thoroughly.
  13. Behold - To see or observe a thing or person, especially a remarkable one.
  14. Witness - To see something happen, typically a significant event.
  15. Spot - To see, notice, or recognize someone or something.
  16. Contemplate - To look thoughtfully for a long time at.
  17. Sight - To suddenly or unexpectedly see something or someone.
  18. Ogle - To stare at in a lecherous manner.
  19. Leer - To look or gaze in an unpleasant, malicious way.
  20. Gawk - To stare openly and stupidly.
  21. Gape - To stare with one's mouth open wide, in amazement.
  22. Squint - To look with eyes partially closed.
  23. Regard - To consider or think of in a specified way.
  24. Admire - To regard with pleasure, wonder, and approval.
  25. Skim - To look through quickly to gain superficial knowledge.
  26. Reconnoiter - To make a military observation of a region.
  27. Flick - To look or move the eyes quickly.
  28. Rake - To look through something rapidly and unsystematically.
  29. Glare - To look angrily or fiercely.
  30. Peep - To look quickly and secretly through an opening.
  31. Focus - To concentrate one's visual effort on.
  32. Discover - To find or realize something not clear before.
  33. Spot-check - To examine something briefly or at random.
  34. Devour - To look over with eager enthusiasm.
  35. Examine - To inspect in detail to determine condition.
  36. Feast one's eyes - To look at something with great enjoyment.
  37. Catch sight of - To suddenly or unexpectedly see.
  38. Clap eyes on - To suddenly see someone or something.
  39. Set eyes on - To look at, especially for the first time.
  40. Take a dekko - Colloquial for taking a look.
  41. Leer at - To look or gaze in a suggestive manner.
  42. Rubberneck - To stare at something in a foolish way.
  43. Make out - To manage to see or read with difficulty.
  44. Lay eyes on - To see or look at.
  45. Pore over - To look at or read something intently.
  46. Ogle at - To look at in a lecherous or predatory way.
  47. Pry - To look or inquire into something in a determined manner.
  48. Dart - To look quickly or furtively.
  49. Drink in - To look at with great enjoyment or fascination.
  50. Bask in - To look at or enjoy something for a period of time.

When your Character...

is...

needs...

loves...

has/experiences...

[these are just quick references. more research may be needed to write your story...]

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the-writers-society-deactivated

5 Moral Dilemmas That Make Characters and Stories Even Better

Readers can’t resist turning pages when characters are facing tough choices. Use these 5 keys to weave moral dilemmas into your stories–and watch your fiction climb to new heights.

#1: Give Your Character Dueling Desires

Before our characters can face difficult moral decisions, we need to give them beliefs that matter: The assassin has his own moral code not to harm women or children, the missionary would rather die than renounce his faith, the father would sacrifice everything to pay the ransom to save his daughter.

A character without an attitude, without a spine, without convictions, is one who will be hard for readers to cheer for and easy for them to forget.

So, to create an intriguing character facing meaningful and difficult choices, give her two equally strong convictions that can be placed in opposition to each other.

For example: A woman wants (1) peace in her home and (2) openness between her and her husband. So, when she begins to suspect that he’s cheating on her, she’ll struggle with trying to decide whether or not to confront him about it. If she only wanted peace she could ignore the problem; if she only wanted openness she would bring it up regardless of the results. But her dueling desires won’t allow her such a simple solution.

That creates tension.

And tension drives a story forward.

So, find two things that your character is dedicated to and then make him choose between them. Look for ways to use his two desires to force him into doing something he doesn’t want to do.

For instance, a Mennonite pastor’s daughter is killed by a drunk driver. When the man is released on a technicality, does the minister forgive him (and what would that even look like?) or does he take justice into his own hands? In this case, his (1) pacifist beliefs are in conflict with his (2) desire for justice. What does he do?

Good question.

Good tension.

Good drama.

Another example: Your protagonist believes (1) that cultures should be allowed to define their own subjective moralities, but also (2) that women should be treated with the same dignity and respect as men. She can’t stand the thought of women being oppressed by the cultures of certain countries, but she also feels it’s wrong to impose her values on someone else. When she is transplanted to one of those countries, then, what does she do?

Construct situations in which your character’s equally strong convictions are in opposition to each other, and you will create occasions for thorny moral choices.

#2: Put Your Character’s Convictions to the Test

We don’t usually think of it this way, but in a very real sense, to bribe someone is to pay him to go against his beliefs; to extort someone is to threaten him unless he goes against them.

For example:

  • How much would you have to pay the vegan animal rights activist to eat a steak (bribery)? Or, how would you need to threaten her in order to coerce her into doing it (extortion)?
  • What would it cost to get the loving, dedicated couple to agree never to see each other again (bribery)? Or, how would you need to threaten them to get them to do so (extortion)?
  • What would you need to pay the pregnant teenage Catholic girl to convince her to have an abortion (bribery)? What threat could you use to get her to do it (extortion)?

Look for ways to bribe and extort your characters. Don’t be easy on them. As writers we sometimes care about our characters so much that we don’t want them to suffer. As a result we might shy away from putting them into difficult situations.

Guess what?

That’s the exact opposite of what needs to happen in order for our fiction to be compelling.

What’s the worst thing you can think of happening to your character, contextually, within this story? Now, challenge yourself—try to think of something else just as bad, and force your character to decide between the two.

Plumb the depths of your character’s convictions by asking, “How far will s/he go to … ?” and “What would it take for … ?”

(1) How far will Frank go to protect the one he loves?

(2) What would it take for him to stand by and watch the one he loves die when he has the power to save her?

(1) How far will Angie go to find freedom?

(2) What would it take for her to choose to be buried alive?

(1) How far will Detective Rodriguez go to pursue justice?

(2) What would it take for him to commit perjury and send an innocent person to death row?

Ask yourself: What does my character believe in? What priorities does she have? What prejudices does she need to overcome? Then, put her convictions to the ultimate test to make her truest desires and priorities come to the surface.

#3: Force Your Character into a Corner

Don’t give him an easy out. Don’t give him any wiggle room. Force him to make a choice, to act. He cannot abstain. Take him through the process of dilemma, choice, action and consequence:

(1) Something that matters must be at stake.

(2) There’s no easy solution, no easy way out.

(3) Your character must make a choice. He must act.

(4) That choice deepens the tension and propels the story forward.

(5) The character must live with the consequences of his decisions and actions.

If there’s an easy solution there’s no true moral dilemma. Don’t make one of the choices “the lesser of two evils”; after all, if one is lesser, it makes the decision easier.

For example, say you’ve taken the suggestion in the first key above and forced your character to choose between honoring equal obligations. He could be caught between loyalty to two parties, or perhaps be torn between his family obligations and his job responsibilities. Now, raise the stakes—his marriage is at risk and so is his job, but he can’t save them both. What does he do?

The more imminent you make the choice and the higher the stakes that decision carries, the sharper the dramatic tension and the greater your readers’ emotional engagement. To achieve this, ask “What if?” and the questions that naturally follow:

  • What if she knows that being with the man she loves will cause him to lose his career? How much of her lover’s happiness would she be willing to sacrifice to be with him?
  • What if an attorney finds herself defending someone she knows is guilty? What does she do? What if that person is her best friend?
  • What if your character has to choose between killing himself or being forced to watch a friend die?

Again, make your character reevaluate his beliefs, question his assumptions and justify his choices. Ask yourself: How is he going to get out of this? What will he have to give up (something precious) or take upon himself (something painful) in the process?

Explore those slippery slopes. Delve into those gray areas. Avoid questions that elicit a yes or no answer, such as: “Is killing the innocent ever justified?” Instead, frame the question in a way that forces you to take things deeper: “When is killing the innocent justified?” Rather than, “Does the end justify the means?” ask, “When does the end justify the means?”

#4: Let the Dilemmas Grow From the Genre

Examine your genre and allow it to influence the choices your character must face. For instance, crime stories naturally lend themselves to exploring issues of justice and injustice: At what point do revenge and justice converge? What does that require of this character? When is preemptive justice really injustice?

Love, romance and relationship stories often deal with themes of faithfulness and betrayal: When is it better to hide the truth than to share it? How far can you shade the truth before it becomes a lie? When do you tell someone a secret that would hurt him? For example, your protagonist, a young bride-to-be, has a one-night stand. She feels terrible because she loves her fiancé, but should she tell him what happened and shatter him—and perhaps lose him—or keep the truth hidden?

Fantasy, myth and science fiction are good venues for exploring issues of consciousness, humanity and morality: How self-aware does something need to be (an animal, a computer, an unborn baby) before it should be afforded the same rights as fully developed humans? At what point does destroying an AI computer become murder? Do we really have free will or are our choices determined by our genetic makeup and environmental cues?

#5: Look the Third Way

You want your readers to be thinking, I have no idea how this is going to play out. And then, when they see where things go, you want them to be satisfied.

There’s a story in the Bible about a time religious leaders caught a woman committing adultery and brought her to Jesus. In those days, in that culture, adultery was an offense that was punishable by death. The men asked Jesus what they should do with this woman. Now, if Jesus had told them to simply let her go free he would have been contravening the law; if, however, he told them to put her to death, he would have undermined his message of “forgiveness and mercy.”

It seemed like a pretty good trap, until he said, “Whoever is without sin among you, let him cast the first stone.”

Nicely done.

I call this finding the Third Way. It’s a solution that’s consistent with the character’s attitude, beliefs and priorities, while also being logical and surprising.

We want the solutions that our heroes come up with to be unexpected and inevitable.

Present yours with a seemingly impossible conundrum.

And then help him find the Third Way out.

I hope this helped! I’ve been really busy today, seeing how my mom had surgery and I’ve been trying to continue writing my novel today as well. I thought I’d squeeze in some more stuff for you guys!

If you have any questions or just want to talk, feel free to visit my ask box!

Writing tips for long fics that helped me that no one asked for.

1.) Don't actually delete content from your WIP unless it is minor editing - instead cut it and put it in a secondary document. If you're omitting paragraphs of content, dialog, a whole scene you might find a better place for it later and having it readily available can really save time. Sometimes your idea was fantastic, but it just wasn't in the right spot.

2.) Stuck with wording the action? Just write the dialog then revisit it later.

3.) Stuck on the whole scene? Skip it and write the next one.

4.) Write on literally any other color than a white background. It just works. (I use black)

5.) If you have a beta, while they are beta-ing have them read your fic out loud. Yes, I know a lot of betas/writers do not have the luxury of face-timing or have the opportunity to do this due to time constraints etc but reading your fic out loud can catch some very awkward phrasing that otherwise might be missed. If you don't have a beta, you read it out loud to yourself. Throw some passion into your dialog, you might find a better way to word it if it sounds stuffy or weird.

6.) The moment you have an idea, write it down. If you don't have paper or a pen, EMAIL it to yourself or put it in a draft etc etc. I have sent myself dozens of ideas while laying down before sleep that I 10/10 forgot the next morning but had emailed them to myself and got to implement them.

7.) Remember - hits/likes/kudos/comments are not reflective of the quality of your fic or your ability to write. Most people just don't comment - even if they say they do, they don't, even if they preach all day about commenting, they don't, even if they are a very popular blog that passionately reminds people to comment - they don't comment (I know this personally). Even if your fic brought tears to their eyes and it haunted them for weeks and they printed it out and sent it to their friends they just don't comment. You just have to accept it. That being said - comment on the fic you're reading now, just do it, if you're 'shy' and that's why you don't comment the more you comment the better you'll get at it. Just do it.

8.) Remove unrealistic daily word count goals from your routine. I've seen people stress 1500 - 2000 words a day and if they don't reach that they feel like a failure and they get discouraged. This is ridiculous. Write when you can, but remove absurd goals. My average is 500 words a day in combination with a 40 hour a week job and I have written over 200k words from 2022-2023.

9.) There are dozens of ways to do an outline from precise analytical deconstruction that goes scene by scene to the minimalist bullet point list - it doesn't matter which one you use just have some sort of direction. A partial outline is better than no outline.

10.) Write for yourself, not for others. Write the fic you know no one is going to read. Write the fic that sounds ridiculous. You will be so happy you put it out in the world and there will be people who will be glad it exists.

soulmate - @jeggyverses-jegulus-microfic - wc: 967

They’re not supposed to be sitting on the floor.

There are chairs. There are tables. There are signs politely asking students not to block the aisles. But the fourth floor of the university library is quiet in the way that feels like a held breath, and the row they’ve claimed is tucked far enough back that no one’s complained yet.

Anonymous asked:

Love your au so much!

Are there any weird or unexpected hobbies/pastimes that any of the character's have that you haven't gotten the chance to talk about?

Thank you so much omg!! ❤️❤️❤️❤️

So far, I’d say the first thing that comes to mind is probably Ashina’s interests and her music taste.

Even though she seems quite academia and very much a goody-two-shoes, she’s actually a huge fan of metal, grunge, and several types of rock. She mostly listens to Iron Maiden, Metallica, The Smiths, Nirvana, David Bowie, Black Sabbath, etc. And just like Alphie (I mean, they must have had something in common to end up being best friends!). She even asks him to play some of her favorite songs on the electric guitar.

No wonder Sirius begged Alphie to marry her when she revealed what she listens to 😂

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❤️🎁 merry little snipmas 🎁❤️

thank you for the tag @deermessrs !

Evan watched him from the couch, one leg crossed over the other, posture relaxed in that infuriatingly calm way he always carried when he knew he had the upper hand. Soft lamplight caught the silver ring around his neck—nothing fancy, just the subtle gleam of a collar Barty pretended not to stare at. “You’re doing that thing again,” Evan said, voice warm and lazy. “The stomping tiger routine.” “It’s not a routine,” Barty muttered, but he stopped anyway. His hands curled and uncurled, restless. “You said you wanted to talk. So talk.” Evan hummed, tapping a finger against the arm of the couch. “I did. But you keep circling like you’re about to chew through the furniture.” Barty glared. Evan only smiled wider. Evan had a way of reading him—seeing through the bravado, the noise, the sharp edges he kept ready like weapons. It was irritating. It was addictive. “So,” Evan said softly, patting the cushion beside him. “Come here.” Barty hated how fast his feet moved.

Writing tips for long fics that helped me that no one asked for.

1.) Don't actually delete content from your WIP unless it is minor editing - instead cut it and put it in a secondary document. If you're omitting paragraphs of content, dialog, a whole scene you might find a better place for it later and having it readily available can really save time. Sometimes your idea was fantastic, but it just wasn't in the right spot.

2.) Stuck with wording the action? Just write the dialog then revisit it later.

3.) Stuck on the whole scene? Skip it and write the next one.

4.) Write on literally any other color than a white background. It just works. (I use black)

5.) If you have a beta, while they are beta-ing have them read your fic out loud. Yes, I know a lot of betas/writers do not have the luxury of face-timing or have the opportunity to do this due to time constraints etc but reading your fic out loud can catch some very awkward phrasing that otherwise might be missed. If you don't have a beta, you read it out loud to yourself. Throw some passion into your dialog, you might find a better way to word it if it sounds stuffy or weird.

6.) The moment you have an idea, write it down. If you don't have paper or a pen, EMAIL it to yourself or put it in a draft etc etc. I have sent myself dozens of ideas while laying down before sleep that I 10/10 forgot the next morning but had emailed them to myself and got to implement them.

7.) Remember - hits/likes/kudos/comments are not reflective of the quality of your fic or your ability to write. Most people just don't comment - even if they say they do, they don't, even if they preach all day about commenting, they don't, even if they are a very popular blog that passionately reminds people to comment - they don't comment (I know this personally). Even if your fic brought tears to their eyes and it haunted them for weeks and they printed it out and sent it to their friends they just don't comment. You just have to accept it. That being said - comment on the fic you're reading now, just do it, if you're 'shy' and that's why you don't comment the more you comment the better you'll get at it. Just do it.

8.) Remove unrealistic daily word count goals from your routine. I've seen people stress 1500 - 2000 words a day and if they don't reach that they feel like a failure and they get discouraged. This is ridiculous. Write when you can, but remove absurd goals. My average is 500 words a day in combination with a 40 hour a week job and I have written over 200k words from 2022-2023.

9.) There are dozens of ways to do an outline from precise analytical deconstruction that goes scene by scene to the minimalist bullet point list - it doesn't matter which one you use just have some sort of direction. A partial outline is better than no outline.

10.) Write for yourself, not for others. Write the fic you know no one is going to read. Write the fic that sounds ridiculous. You will be so happy you put it out in the world and there will be people who will be glad it exists.

dream - @rosekillermicrofic - wc: 643

Barty Crouch Jr. had decided, at precisely 3:07 a.m., that this convenience store was a punishment assigned by God himself.

Why was it open 24/7? Who needed a lukewarm hotdog or a lottery ticket or a pack of gum at this hour? Absolutely no one. That’s who. And yet here he was, rocking back and forth in the squeaky chair behind the counter, chewing the end of his pen like it had personally offended him.

The hum of the fluorescent lights was so constant it felt like it had carved a permanent groove into the inside of his skull. If he died here, he decided, the neon OPEN sign would be the last thing he’d see. And the first thing that greeted his ghost every night.

He sighed dramatically. No audience. Tragic.

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