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How To Banish The Laziest Word In The English Langauge —“Thing”

It’s the ball hog on your vocabulary team

Barry Davret
5 min readApr 16, 2021
Licensed from Shutterstock // Roman Samborskyi

Whether you’re a writer of short stories, blogs, or emails, there’s a simple exercise you can do to strengthen your craft.

Revisit an old piece a week or two after publishing. It’s easier to spot flaws when you read your piece without the emotion of impending publication or the pressure of a deadline.

In almost every piece, you’ll find a typo, a confusing sentence, a silly cliché, or some other shame-inducing writing faux pas.

That’s what happened to me this morning. I opened a recent story and nearly cried at my blatant defilement of the English language.

My crime?

I used the word thing, not once but three times.

To use a basketball analogy, think of the word thing as the ball hog on your vocabulary team — the untalented dude who monopolizes the ball but never scores. The use of “thing” infests our communication. Yet, like the ball hog in basketball, it never scores, communicating vagueness and ambiguity instead of clarity and vivid imagery.

It’s a lazy way to express yourself, allowing you to cover all possibilities of meaning instead of drilling down to specificity.

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Barry Davret
Barry Davret

Written by Barry Davret

Work in Forge | Elemental | BI | GMP | Others | Contact: barry@barry-davret dot com. Join Medium for full access: https://barry-davret.medium.com/membership

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