Subject: Bring Your Characters to Life with Character Dictionaries

The Writers World
August 04, 2015 / 080415
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Bring Your Characters to Life with Character Dictionaries

By Suzanne Lieurance

Before you start writing your first or next novel, take some time to
create a character dictionary for each of your characters. You can add
to these dictionaries as you’re writing your first draft of the story.
These dictionaries will help you bring each of your characters to life.

What is a Character Dictionary?

A character dictionary is a list of words and phrases that reveals how your character uses language. These words will help you make your characters as authentic within their identities and worlds as possible. For example, let’s suppose you’re writing a book about a 10-year-old boy growing up among the surfing community in southern California. This boy’s vocabulary would probably be much different from a 10-year-old boy growing up at a prep school in New England. Here are some words that might be included in the dictionary for your surfer character:

• Dawn patrol
• Leash or Leggy
• Foamies
• Going Off
• Locked In
• A-Frame
• Getting Worked

Just imagine how these terms used in your character’s dialogue could help set him apart from other characters in your story and bring him to life for readers.

How to Find Words and Phrases for Your Character Dictionaries

So how do you find words and phrases to add to your character dictionaries if you’re creating characters who are very different from yourself?

Well, you do a little research, of course. And it can be fun!

Read books by other authors whose characters match yours in some ways.

Go online and google terms that apply. For example, when I googled “surfing terms” all sorts of online surfing dictionaries popped up.

Rent movies that include characters like yours and make notes about the words and phrases the characters use.

Visit online forums that apply and read comments in these forums and jot down specific terms and use of language you find there.

Find “meetup” groups in your area that your character would most likely join. For example, if your character is an artist, attending a local meetup group for artists will help you learn some of the terminology artists are using these days. You can find all sorts of meetup groups by visiting meetup.com.

Sit in the park or go to a coffee shop and listen to the way people speak. Parks are perfect if you need to get a feel for how moms today speak to their kids or how kids speak to each other. Coffee shops will help you learn what teens, young adults, and business professionals (who often do business in coffee shops) are saying these days.

Character dictionaries can be especially helpful if you wish to write in the voice of a character from a race and ethnicity different from your own. Your character dictionaries should include:

• Individual use of diction (word choice) and syntax (sentence structure)
• Vocabulary
• Metaphoric language
• Idioms, sayings, and dialogue tags

For more tips and information about creating powerful character dictionaries, read "Manuscript Makeover, Revision Techniques No Fiction Writer Can Afford to Ignore" by Elizabeth Lyon.

Try it!

Suzanne Lieurance is an author, freelance writer, certified professional life coach and writing coach, speaker and workshop presenter. She has written over two dozen published books and hundreds of articles for newspapers, magazines, and other publications. She publishes The Morning Nudge, a free e-mail for writers delivered every weekday morning.

TO LEAVE A COMMENT, GO TO:
http://www.writersonthemove.com/2014/10/make-your-dreams-reality-with-15.html

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I hope you found this information interesting and helpful. Too advanced, not enough, just right? I’d really love to know, so please leave a comment – good or bad or email me at: karencioffi@ymail.com

P.S. If you liked this article, PLEASE SHARE IT BELOW!

Want to boost your online marketing results?

Is Your Business / Marketing Stuck in Neutral?

Get Traffic to Your Website with Inbound Marketing

This 4-week, interactive, in-depth e-class through WOW Women on Writing covers the four fundamental elements of inbound marketing: Website Optimization, Blogging Smart, Email Marketing, and Social Media Marketing.

What does this mean for you? Simple: More traffic, increased authority, better rankings, and more conversions (people who click on your call-to-actions)!

It’s must-know stuff (and easier to do than you think) for ALL marketers, including writers, authors . . .

It's interactive and in-depth. Check it out today!

CLICK HERE FOR DETAILS

PERMISSION TO REPRINT

You may reprint this article from "The Writing World” in its entirety in your own blog or print/electronic newsletter. But, please include the following paragraph:

Article reprinted from The Writing World newsletter. Want more must-know writing and marketing information along with updates on free webinars right in your inbox? Get access to The Writing World (http://thewritingworld.com) today.


Contact Info
Karen Cioffi, the Article Writing Doctor
Your Content Writing Prescription

Karen Cioffi Professional Writing Services
For Businesses and Individuals (including academic and medical article editing)

Email: karencioffi [at] ymail [dot] com

I'm an affiliate for some of the products I recommend. I only tell you about products I've checked out.


LikeTwitterPinterestGooglePlusLinkedInForward
Karen Cioffi-Ventrice, P.O. Box 672, No. Bellmore, New York 11710, United States
You may unsubscribe or change your contact details at any time.