Do you want to know what cliches are and how to avoid them? Cliches are phrases that have been used so often that they lose their impact on your audience. Writers, poets, and songwriters need to be aware of them, because they can drain emotional energy from your work. Keep reading How to Avoid Writing Annoying Cliches to learn what they are and how to stay away from them.
How to Avoid Writing Cliches #1: What Is a Cliche?
Merriam-Webster defines cliche (or cliché) as:
1: A trite phrase or expression (also: the idea expressed by it).
2: A hackneyed theme, characterization, or situation.
In other words, the word cliche means that you are using boring word choices:
They’ve lost their excitement because they’ve been used by so many writers over the years.
Plus, they’re easy to write, because they’re always on the tip of your pen.
However, if you want to avoid cliches, you need to work harder to find original ideas.
How to Avoid Writing Cliches #2: Be Aware of Overused Phrases
One of the best ways to become aware of cliches is to know the most common ones. Here’s a list of fifty venerable cliches:
A dark and stormy night
A fine kettle of fish
Actions speak louder than words
All in a day’s work
Barking up the wrong tree
Beat a dead horse
Bite the bullet
Blast from the past
Blessing in disguise
Burning the midnight oil
Call the shots
Calm before the storm
Can of worms
Diamond in the rough
Easier said than done
Easy as pie
Every cloud has a silver lining
Everybody’s a comic
Hit the nail on the head
Ignorance is bliss
It is what it is
Kill two birds with one stone
Let the cat out of the bag
Loose canon
More than life itself
Nick of time
On thin ice
Once in a blue moon
Opposites attract
Outside the box
Perfect storm
Piece of cake
Raining cats and dogs
Read between the lines
Rock and a hard place
Room to swing a dead cat
Scared to death
Take it easy
The ball is now in your court
The wrong side of the bed
Time flies
Time heals all wounds
Time will tell
Turn it up to eleven
Two to tango
Water under the bridge
What goes around, comes around
When pigs fly
You’re a laugh a minute
Your cake and eat it too
Keep reading to find out how to write original ideas instead of cliches.
How to Avoid Writing Cliches #3: How to Avoid Writing Them
How do you steer clear of cliche writing?
Avoid writing the first thing that you think of, because it will usually be, if not an outright cliche, at least unoriginal.
Alternatively, you can edit out cliches after your first draft.
First, you identify hackneyed phrases (like in the list above). Then, you need to reach down inside yourself to find fresh language by saying the same things in different ways.
For example:
Instead of saying, “He’s between a rock and a hard place.”
You could say, “It was like he was caught in a tunnel with a speeding train’s light growing larger and larger.”
Both convey the idea of unavoidable pain to come, but the second sentence has more original imagery.
How to Avoid Writing Cliches #4: Moon/June Rhymes
What is a cliche rhyme? They are old, tired rhymes that songwriters and poets need to be aware of:
These types of rhymes are called Moon/June
They got this name because of how the moon/June word pair was overused in the early tin pan alley days.
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