Nib #127 When not “To Be”
There is nothing wrong with “to be” verbs — is, are, were, was, am, etc. Sometimes they’re the right word (like in this sentence!). But often “to be” verbs hide the right word.
Consider:
The Senator is a supporter of gun control.
The storms were responsible for the delayed flights.
In each case, an action verb can convey the same thought in a tighter, livelier sentence, like:
The Senator supports gun control.
The storms delayed the flights.
Active verbs give your nouns something to do. And when your nouns move, so does your writing.
So next time you’re editing something you wrote, circle every “to be” verb and then re-read the sentence. See if there is an active verb in the second half of the sentence masquerading as a noun or an adjective, like in the examples above.
If swapping that verb in for the “to be” one makes the sentence brisker and more vivid, congratulations: you just learned a way to improve every paragraph you ever write.
Until next week… keep writing!











