Why filler words survive the draft

Filler words persist because they feel purposeful when you write them. "Just" feels like a softening touch. "Very" feels like emphasis. "Began to" feels like it's capturing the start of a process. In the moment of composition, they're doing something — they're bridging the gap between the intention in your head and the sentence forming on the page.

The problem is that readers don't have access to the intention. They only have the sentence. And in the sentence, "just" is noise, "very" is a signal that the word it modifies wasn't strong enough, and "began to run" is slower than "ran" without being more true. The words that felt purposeful in the draft become invisible to the reader — not in the useful way "said" is invisible, but in the way that makes them wonder why the scene feels sluggish when nothing obviously wrong.

The filler word pass is one of the highest-return edits you can make. It takes less than an hour on a full novel manuscript and the prose that comes out the other side is measurably tighter — not because you rewrote anything, but because you removed the static between the reader and the story.

The cut list — four groups

These aren't words to blacklist. They're words to interrogate. For each one: does it add meaning that wouldn't exist without it? If not, cut it. You'll find that "no" is the right answer more than 80% of the time.

Group 01

Intensifiers that weaken

Words that try to amplify an adjective or verb — and end up revealing it wasn't strong enough to begin with.

very
The most flagged word in fiction. "Very cold" → "freezing." If you need "very," the word you modified isn't doing its job.
really
Spoken emphasis that reads flat on the page. Cut it or replace the word it's propping up.
so
Works in dialogue as character voice. In narration it's usually filler — "so angry" is weaker than "furious."
quite
A false qualifier that dilutes rather than sharpens. "Quite good" is less than "good" — not more.
rather
Usually a hedge masquerading as precision. "Rather difficult" — more or less difficult than just "difficult"? The reader can't tell.
truly
Signals that the writer doesn't trust the sentence to land without it. That distrust is usually correct — fix the sentence, not the adverb.
deeply
"Deeply moved," "deeply troubled" — these phrases have been used so often the adverb no longer adds depth. It just adds syllables.
extremely
A formal intensifier that reads as stiff in narrative prose. Whatever it's modifying almost certainly has a single strong word that does the job.
incredibly
Hyperbolic in origin, now inert. "Incredibly fast" — fast by what measure? The intensifier papers over a precision problem.
absolutely
Works in dialogue. In narration it almost always precedes a word that was already absolute — "absolutely certain," "absolutely clear."
Group 02

Hedging words

Qualifiers that soften meaning — useful in dialogue for character voice, problematic in narration where precision matters.

just
The single most common filler word in fiction manuscripts. Fifty-plus instances per 80,000 words is typical. Almost always cuttable.
almost
Legitimate when the almost-ness matters. Filler when used to soften a strong verb or adjective that should be committed to.
nearly
Same issue as almost. "Nearly ran" — did they run or not? If the nearness is the point, earn it. If not, commit.
somewhat
The most colourless qualifier in English. It adds no precision and subtracts all force. Cut every instance, then see if any need replacing.
slightly
Legitimate in specific comparisons. Filler when used to avoid committing to an emotion: "slightly worried" instead of simply worried, or terrified.
a little / a bit
Conversational qualifiers that diffuse narrative tension. "A little afraid" is a character who doesn't want to admit they're afraid — which is often characterisation, not filler, but needs to be intentional.
kind of / sort of
Spoken-language hedges that read as imprecision in narration. They belong in dialogue as voice markers, not in narrative as descriptors.
Group 03

False action starters

Constructions that delay the action by one step — describing the start of a process instead of the process itself.

began to
The most common false action starter. "She began to run" → "She ran." The beginning is almost never what matters — the action is.
started to
Identical problem to "began to." Adds a step before the action the reader actually wants. In fast scenes it bleeds pace.
seemed to
Introduces uncertainty where there usually is none. If the character smiled, they smiled. "Seemed to smile" makes the narrator unreliable without intending to.
appeared to
Same issue as "seemed to" — a distancing construction that holds the reader at arm's length from what's actually happening.
tried to
Legitimate when the attempt fails and that matters. Filler when used habitually to soften committed action: "she tried to stand" instead of "she stood, unsteady."
managed to
Implies difficulty without showing it. "She managed to open the door" — show the difficulty with specific detail, or just open the door.
Group 04

Redundant time and pace words

Speed and timing adverbs that add nothing when the action already implies them — and undermine tension when they're deployed as shortcuts.

suddenly
Tells the reader to be surprised instead of constructing the scene so the surprise lands naturally. Considered at length below.
immediately
Redundant when what follows already implies urgency. "He immediately ran" — running is already fast. The adverb adds nothing and breaks rhythm.
quickly
Use a verb that carries the speed instead: "darted," "sprinted," "snapped." "Quickly walked" is always weaker than a single precise verb.
slowly
Same principle. "Slowly opened" — show the slowness in the character's body or the resistance of the door. The adverb is always the shortcut version.

Rewrite 1 of 3 — Intensifier stack

Filler-heavy

It was very cold in the room, and she felt quite certain that something was deeply wrong. The silence was incredibly oppressive.

Four intensifiers in two sentences. Each one is doing less work than the word it's modifying.

Cut and sharpened

The room was freezing. She was certain something was wrong. The silence pressed in.

"Freezing" replaces "very cold." The certainty is absolute now — no qualifier. The silence becomes active.

Rewrite 2 of 3 — False action starters

Filler-heavy

He began to run. Behind him, she started to shout. He tried to block out the sound and managed to reach the door before she caught him.

Four false starters turn a chase into a series of tentative attempts. The pace dies in the construction.

Cut and committed

He ran. Behind him, she shouted. He kept his eyes on the door, blocked everything else out, and hit it at full speed.

Direct verbs. The chase reads like a chase. "Managed to reach" becomes physical detail instead.

Rewrite 3 of 3 — Hedging in emotional scene

Filler-heavy

"I just wanted to say I'm sort of sorry," he said. She seemed to consider it. She was a little surprised, somewhat relieved.

Six hedges in three sentences. Every emotion is qualified into near-nonexistence.

Cut and committed

"I wanted to say I'm sorry," he said. She looked at him for a long moment. Surprised. And — against her better judgment — relieved.

The apology is real now. Her reaction becomes specific action plus two sharp emotional beats.

"Filler words don't make prose feel longer — they make it feel thinner. The reader moves faster and feels less."

— On why tightening prose improves both pace and impact

The "just" problem

just
50–120 instances per novel · almost always cuttable

"Just" is the most common filler word in first-draft fiction by a significant margin. A typical 80,000-word manuscript contains between 50 and 120 instances. Most of them are invisible to the writer — because "just" is the word English speakers reach for when softening a request, an action, or a statement that feels too blunt or too committed.

In dialogue, "just" can be character voice — a way of showing someone who undersells themselves, minimises their needs, or apologises for existing. That's deliberate. In narration, it's almost always filler: a habit of hedging that crept in from spoken language and never left.

Before She just wanted to know if he was okay. She just needed a minute. It was just a small thing, she told herself.
After She wanted to know if he was okay. She needed a minute. It wasn't a small thing, and she knew it.

Cutting the three "justs" here doesn't just tighten the sentences — it reveals that "It was just a small thing" was actually the character lying to herself. That's more interesting than filler. The rewrite converts a hedge into interiority.

The test for "just": remove it and read the sentence aloud. If it sounds harsher than you intended, that harshness was doing work — put it back. In 80% of cases, the sentence without "just" is simply cleaner.

"Suddenly" — why it kills tension instead of creating it

suddenly
kills the surprise it's trying to create

"Suddenly" is the writer's way of saying: something unexpected is about to happen. The problem is that this announcement destroys the unexpectedness. The reader reads "suddenly" and braces. By the time the event arrives, the reader has anticipated it — because "suddenly" just told them to.

Surprise in fiction is constructed, not announced. It comes from a scene that doesn't signal what's coming — from specific, grounded detail in the lines before the reversal, from a rhythm that lulls before it breaks. "Suddenly" short-circuits all of that in exchange for a word that costs one syllable and delivers nothing.

With "suddenly" — the surprise is telegraphed She was reaching for her keys when suddenly the lights went out.
Without — the sentence does the work She was reaching for her keys. The lights went out.

The second version is faster and more disorienting — which is what "suddenly" was trying to achieve. The paragraph break (or the full stop before a new sentence) creates the abruptness. The word itself never could.

The rule: if something happens suddenly, show it happening with no warning. The construction of the scene creates the surprise. "Suddenly" is a note to yourself that you haven't done that yet.

How to do a filler word pass

The filler word pass is a targeted editing session — usually one to two hours on a full novel — focused exclusively on removing filler. Don't try to do it while you're working on other edits; do it as its own dedicated read.

01

Start with the highest-frequency words

Open Find & Replace (Ctrl+H / ⌘+H) and search for "just." Work through every instance: cut it, leave it, or rewrite the sentence around it. Then repeat for "very," "really," and "began to." These four alone will account for the majority of your filler.

02

Do the intensifiers as a group

Search for "very," then "really," then "so" (in narration only — dialogue "so" is often intentional). For each hit: is there a stronger single word? "Very tired" → "exhausted." "Really angry" → "furious." If you find yourself unable to upgrade the word, it was the right word — put the intensifier back and move on.

03

Hunt false action starters in action scenes specifically

Search "began to" and "started to" — these cluster in action sequences, chase scenes, and moments of physical confrontation, exactly where pace matters most. Convert each to the simple past of the main verb. Read the surrounding sentences again to confirm the rhythm improved.

04

Read the flagged sections aloud after cutting

After each find-and-replace pass, read the surrounding paragraph aloud. A cut that looks clean on screen sometimes breaks a rhythm that was working. Your ear catches what your eye misses. If the sentence sounds wrong without the filler word, find the deeper problem — the filler was masking it.

05

Use Inkcheck to catch what you missed

Paste your manuscript into Inkcheck after your manual pass. It flags filler words across your full text, highlights them inline, and lets you approve or dismiss each one — catching the instances your eye passed over during your own read.

Let Inkcheck find your filler words

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