Adjective Rules edition/wg/ AUTHORS & FLASH FICTION: https://pastebin.com/ruwQj7xQRESOURCES & RECOMMENDATIONS: https://pastebin.com/nFxdiQvCPlease limit excerpts to one post.Give advice as much as you receive it to the best of your ability.Discuss the written works below for practice; contribute, and you shall receive.If you have not performed a cursory proofread, do not expect to be treated kindly. Edit your work for spelling and grammar before posting.Shitposters should be ignored and reported.Beginner guides on writing:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pHdzv1NfZRMhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=whPnobbck9s https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YAKcbvioxFkIntermediate guides on writing:https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/48654.Storyhttps://www.goodreads.com/book/show/3097766-borges-on-writinghttps://www.goodreads.com/book/show/23056.Image_Music_TextAdvanced guide on writing:Just do it.Theme: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ssCL292DQA&list=RD2ssCL292DQA(nobody listens or clicks this anyways)
>>25173393everyone point and laugh
>>25173393I prefer>the wooden round old tiny Italian shopping red four adorable shopping baskets were perfect for the market
we're back
>>25173503>no subjectare we?>"nooo but it still says /wg/ in the body text!!!"what is a book without its title?
this help me writed email for my village outreaching for the securements of moneys
>>25173512Remake the thread!!!
>>25173514is it ableist or xenophobic to write a character with dialogue like this
>>25173393Is this the correct order?The psychopathic seven-feet-tall werewolf billionaire serial killer swaggered briskly into Starbucks and ordered two cups of caramel ribbon crunch frappuccino with a side of egg, pesto & mozzarella sandwich from the plain Jane four-foot-two twenty-year-old brown-haired immigrant barista.
>>25173393"the" is an adjective?
my writing is so bad and gay.my goal right now is to just power through and hate it later so i actually get something written
I'm getting tired of y'all not putting the name of the general in the subject. I'm tried of wasting a minute if my life having to find this stuff. Fight me next time
I was rereading some old stories I wrote over ten years ago, and they were so witty and eloquent, with fun wordplay and fresh ideas. Nowadays, I'm so fucking burned out and retarded, all I can produce is like, "Here's man. The man is old. He drinks beer." How did it all go so wrong?
Finally figured out how to fill scenes/chapters with enough words without it becoming padding or long, boring descriptions.Just break up the scene goal/problem into medium sized ones. Then break those into micro-problems/goals that need to be overcome/solved for the scene goal/problem. And if desired break them even further down. For example 10 micro-problems with 200 words each result in 2000 words. And this is with already very lean prose.
>>25174206Are you speaking in terms of narrative problems, like getting a character to leave the room at an appropriate point, or has your story become all about solving these small problems you're manufactured as if the cast is trying to exit an escape room?
>>25173393damn is this an actual rule or just something someone put together, like who even gets to decide this
>>25174582It's a legit rule. If you read>>25173413It sounds incredibly off and doesn't make any sense
>>25174574I'm talking about plot problems or obstacles that the protagonist needs to overcome in each specific scene or chapter if you use the scene=chapter framework. I just couldn't "make up" enough convincing obstacles and would just write: Setup -> the "big thing" problem or riddle -> Resolution/Cliffhanger.Now I learned or realized that you have to break down everything into smaller sub-problems that are all part of the bigger one and write their Action-Decision-Outcome-Action sequence, which easily ramps up word count.