ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos

Excessive Verbiage 358 Views


Share It!

Click here for all the goods.

">

Description:

Want even more deets on grammar? Click here for all the goods.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:07

Excessive Verbiage, a la Shmoop. Using too many words is like being in the

00:12

process of shoving a burning hot drumstick of KFC chicken into your mouth and still thinking

00:17

to yourself, “I want each and every one of these pieces of chicken in my mouth right

00:22

now” and then ending up immortalized forever on the wall as that guy who was so hungry

00:27

he ate a whole bucket of KFC in under a minute and then proceeded to cry for an hour…

00:32

<<completely out of breath, inhales deeply>>

00:34

Put simply, it’s a little unnecessary.

00:36

One major mistake both grammar novices and experts make is excessive verbiage – that

00:42

is, unnecessary wordiness, unneeded redundancy, too much repetition…

00:49

… um, you get it.

00:53

Heck, even the phrase excessive verbiage is excessive! The word verbiage already means

01:00

“too many words.”

01:00

When you say “excessive verbiage,” you’re really saying too many too many words.

01:13

So while you might think you sound smart and sophisticated…

01:15

…when you break it down, you actually just sound like you’re trying waaaaay too hard.

01:19

You want your sentences to be well-oiled machines…

01:22

…not big ugly clunkers, or even pimped-out Ferraris.

01:26

All the parts should work together to create the sleekest, most energy-efficient sentence

01:30

possible.

01:30

Basically, you want your sentence to be a Prius.

01:33

<<quickly, under breath>> Shmoop was not paid to advertise Prius brand vehicles. However,

01:37

if Prius would like to compensate us for the free publicity, they may contact us any time.

01:42

So how do you avoid clunky or gratuitous language? Well, here are a few tips, partially inspired

01:50

by our chicken champ up there:

01:53

First off, think about what you’re saying when you use an abbreviation.

01:57

KFC chicken? You just said Kentucky Fried Chicken chicken…

02:02

…and trust us, we tried. That doesn’t make them give you more chicken.

02:06

And that’s just a simple example – it doesn’t have to be an abbreviation. A lot

02:12

of words have built in meanings like that, so keep an eye out for them:

02:16

That “burning hot” chicken? It can just be “hot.” And if you’re getting “immortalized

02:21

forever,” you’re living forever twice.

02:23

And there’s no such thing as two forevers. Forevers isn’t even a word.

02:30

And finally, just read your sentence. Now take a part out, and read it again. If it

02:35

still has the same meaning – take the extra junk out!

02:39

Let’s try this on parts of our sentence:

02:42

“Using too many words is like being in the process of shoving chicken in your mouth…”

02:47

Do you really need “in the process of”?

02:49

Or “eating the whole bucket and then proceeding to cry for an hour…”

02:54

Change it to “eating the whole bucket, then crying for an hour.”

02:59

Nothing is lost, and you don’t have to say as much.

03:02

And uh, a good rule of thumb is probably to end the sentence before you’re completely

03:06

out of breath.

03:08

Avoid excessive verbiage – sorry, verbiage -- and you’ll be the coolest guy or girl

03:12

in town…

03:13

…well, at least to us here in Shmoopville.

Up Next

What Not to do in an Introduction
32968 Views

This video offers some rules of thumb for writing a good introduction. It covers everything from tone (confidence is key!) to phrases and clichés...

Related Videos

What Not to do in a Conclusion
7001 Views

Even the best essays can go wrong in the conclusion—this video covers what not to do in a conclusion to help avoid any essay-ending problems. The...

Using Citations Effectively
3751 Views

You want to be as picky with your citations as Goldilocks was with her porridge—not too many, not too few... juuust right. You want to prove that...

Wordiness
15167 Views

Want even more deets on wordiness? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.

Run-on Sentences
6511 Views

Want even more deets on Run-on Sentences? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.