⌕ naruto - kiba.
like or reblog if you save/use.
my biggest awooga
important content warnings: 18+ MDNI, monsterfucking, friends to lovers, unestablished mating bond, mutual pining, college/modern AU.
pairing: werewolf!bsf!kiba inuzuka/fem!reader
divider credit: cafekitsune
↳ finding peace in the spontaneous wild (26.2k) — when an accidental encounter with your former childhood best friend leads you to agree to a one-night camping trip consisting of just you two, you discover that there’s more to your friendship than initially meets the eye.
↳ a friend, a mate, and all things in-between (22.8k) — after finding out the truth about the role you supposedly play in kiba’s life, you settle on a compromise of taking things slow and seeing where the wind takes you while you’re at it.
hi !!! i love your dividers and I use them all the time for roleplay sheets, would you be able to recolour this set in these colours?
e993bd
a74d76
f4aed0
ffdced
thank you if you do, and if you don't i hope you have a wonderful day regardless!!!! /g
hi! 💖 that is so cool (and thank you so much!), I can absolutely recolor this set for you! here you go, and I hope you have a great day as well!
[Free] Masterlist Headers & Dividers!
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Make your writing come alive by describing things that appeal to the senses. Instead of saying "It was a beautiful garden," you could say "The garden was filled with the scent of fresh roses, the sound of buzzing bees, and the vibrant colors of blooming flowers."
Instead of just saying what something is like, show it through your words. For instance, instead of saying "She was sad," you could describe her actions and surroundings to show her sadness: "Tears welled up in her eyes as she stared out the rain-streaked window, clutching a crumpled tissue in her hand."
Instead of using general words, get specific. Instead of saying "He drove a car," you could say "He drove a sleek, black convertible, the wind tousling his hair as he sped down the open highway."
Keep your writing interesting by mixing up short and long sentences. Don't always write in the same way. For example, "The sky was dark. The trees swayed in the wind. It felt eerie," could be improved by adding variety: "Dark clouds gathered overhead, causing the trees to sway ominously in the gusting wind, casting an eerie feeling over the landscape."
Use your descriptions to set the mood of your story. Instead of just saying "It was a scary place," describe the setting to evoke fear in your readers: "The abandoned house loomed in the moonlight, its broken windows and creaking doors whispering of unseen terrors lurking within."
Don't just drop descriptions randomly into your writing. Make sure they fit naturally into the flow of your story. Instead of stopping the action to describe something, weave it into the narrative: "As she ran through the forest, the branches clawed at her skin, leaving scratches like whispers of the dangers lurking in the shadows."
While descriptions are important, don't forget to keep your story moving forward. Don't spend too much time describing things at the expense of the action. Find a balance between describing the scene and keeping the plot moving.
Using too many adjectives can make your writing sound cluttered and overwhelming. Stick to the essentials and choose your words carefully.
Don't forget that dialogue and interactions between characters are key parts of your story. Use them to reveal personality and move the plot forward.
Don't repeat yourself. Once you've described something, trust your readers to remember it. Don't keep saying the same thing over and over again.
Sometimes, what you don't say can be just as important as what you do say. Let your readers read between the lines and draw their own conclusions.
Avoid using tired old phrases that everyone has heard before. Try to come up with fresh, original descriptions that will grab your readers' attention.
Be mindful of the pace of your story. Don't slow things down with long descriptions in the middle of an action scene. Save the detailed descriptions for quieter moments when the pace naturally slows down.
References (Elements; Subgenres; Tips; Some Vocabulary)
Detective story - one whose plot hinges on a crime that the characters investigate and attempt to solve.
Also called “whodunnit” stories or crime stories.
Most detective stories are written from the point of view of a detective.
A Detective
Usually featured as the protagonist.
Spend time thinking about your detective’s personality, their motivations, their background, their strengths, and their weaknesses. You’ll want your detective to be unique among the other detectives out there.
A Crime
Most detective stories revolve around a central crime or string of related crimes.
Since the crime will be the catalyst of your short story or novel, it should be interesting, memorable, and seemingly unsolvable—that way, readers will be so tantalized by the mystery of it that they’ll need to keep reading.
A dead body is a very common crime in detective fiction, but there are plenty of other options—from robberies to disappearances.
Suspects
Many detective stories include an array of suspects that could have committed the crime (either they have weak alibis or have a history of lying).
Your suspects are a vital part of your detective story; they serve as red herrings (or distractions) that will direct readers’ attention away from the true culprit.
Some mystery novels don’t have any suspects—this is a deliberate choice by crime writers that serves to heighten the tension in the story, but if your story doesn’t have any suspects, find creative ways to keep the case from going cold.
An Antagonist
The person whose goals are in direct conflict with the antagonist’s.
Traditionally, the antagonist is the true culprit for the story’s crime (or crimes), but that’s not who your antagonist has to be; the antagonist of your story could be a police officer who wants to solve the crime first or someone who knows the identity of the culprit and is trying to cover it up.
A Setting
The setting is a very important part of any detective story because the action in most detective stories takes place on the streets of its location.
Therefore the stories are inextricably linked to the time and place they are set in and are memorable because of those details.
Here are just a few subgenres that fall under detective stories
Police-department procedurals. Focus on police work and often feature homicide investigators and other departments of a local police force.
Cozy mysteries. These have a lighter tone than traditional detective fiction and avoid explicit depictions of the murder. They are often set in a small town and focus on puzzle-solving rather than suspense.
Hardboiled detective stories. These stories are usually dark and explicit, featuring a veteran detective who treats violent crimes matter-of-factly.
Thrillers. Emphasize suspenseful storytelling, often featuring chase scenes or murder sprees that the detective must stop before the time runs out.
Locked-room mysteries. Feature crimes that, at the outset, appear impossible—for instance, a murder taking place in a seemingly locked room with no other way in or out.
Interesting Motivation
The motivation of the culprit is one of the most crucial and prominent parts of detective work—what readers want to know even more than who committed the crime is why they committed it.
Nothing spoils a good detective story more than an uninteresting or unbelievable motivation (for instance, a serial killer who is just “pure evil” and has no discernable reasons for murdering) or an unmotivated confession.
In the same vein, your detective should also have a strong motivation for being in this line of work—it’s not easy, and many people wouldn’t be able to stomach it.
Learn about Detective Work
Readers want to feel immersed in the world of your detective story—whether it’s the world of the law or the seedy underbelly of a small town.
That’s why it’s so important to get the details right when crime writing—so you can keep the reader’s attention with believable plot points.
Do the research to make sure that you know who would be the first to make it to the scene of a crime, how detectives would go about tracking people down or questioning them, and what role forensics would play in your crime scene, so that your readers don’t spend any time wondering if what they’re reading is accurate to real life.
Too Easy
Readers pick up detective fiction because they want to be intrigued by a good mystery—so if your crime is too easy for them to solve, they’ll get bored and likely not finish the story.
Trust in your readers’ ability for logical deduction and don’t give too much away, leaving them guessing and really shocking them.
A Payoff
Try to avoid an outcome where readers will feel let down by the answer.
In the words of S. S. Van Dine, a famous mystery-novel-writing art critic, “A crime in a detective story must never turn out to be an accident or a suicide. To end an odyssey of sleuthing with such an anti-climax is to hoodwink the trusting and kind-hearted reader.”
By that same logic, try to avoid any “deus ex machina”— an impossible-to-solve situation is suddenly resolved with little or no effort from the characters.
Experiment & Innovate
Read lots of detective fiction and then subvert the tropes—
What if your main character is the person who committed the crime, and your bad guy is the detective or official investigator working to solve it?
Or what if your character’s love interest was the victim?
Establish a working vocabulary will help improve detective fiction writing
accusation - statement that places blame on a specific person or persons
alias - an alternate name used to conceal identity
alibi - an explanation that removes a person from the scene of a crime when it occurred
angle - specific strategy or way of looking at facts as employed by the detective during an investigation
autopsy - the medical examination of a corpse to determine cause(s) of death
booking - the process whereby a suspect is officially arrested and charged with a crime
case - the investigation of a crime from the time it is reported/ discovered until it is resolved (closed)
charges - specific crime(s) a person is accused of
circumstantial - indicative but not conclusive
clue - anything that sheds light on a particular case
collar - the actual arrest by a police officer
corpus dilecti - the actual body that proves a murder has been committed
crime of passion - a crime committed in a rage of anger, hatred, revenge, etc.
culprit - the “bad guy;” criminal
D.A. - district attorney; works for the government
deduction - conclusion reached through a logical progression of steps
defense - the argument made to show the innocence of the accused person
evidence - material that will prove innocence or guilt
eyewitness - someone who actually observes a crime and/or criminal
felony - major crime (i.e., armed robbery, murder, rape)
foil - the detective’s “right hand man;” he/she is usually quite different in nature. Ex: Holmes/Watson; Nero Wolfe/ Archie Goodwin
frame-up - deliberate trap set to lay blame on an innocent person
habeas corpus - accusor has to produce a body in order to hold a suspect
homicide - the act of murder
hunch - guess; instinct
informer - relays information to police/detective for money (usually)
inquest/inquiry - legal questioning concerning a particular event or action
lead - something/someone that may help move an investigation to a solution
malice aforethought - criminal was already considering a hostile act before the crime occurred
manslaughter - accidental killing
misdemeanor - minor offense
modus operandi - method of operation (m.o.) that a criminal employs during his crimes
morgue - city government building where dead bodies are kept during investigations
motive - reason for committing a crime
perpetrator - offender; criminal
post mortem - the report from an autopsy
premeditation - deliberate intent to perform a crime before it occurs
private eye - private detective
prosecutor - attorney working for the District Attorney; person trying to prove guilt in a courtroom
red herring - a false clue that usually misleads the reader (and often the detective)
set-up - a trap that is designed to catch a criminal or victim
sleuth - detective
statement - official document containing information supplied by witness, suspect, or any other person involved in an investigation
stool pigeon - informer
surveillance - constant visual or electronic monitoring of a person’s activities
suspect - someone who may have reason to have committed a specific crime
tank - jail cell
third degree - intensive questioning of a suspect
victim - person who is hurt or killed as a result of a criminal act
Sources: 1 2 Writing Notes: Autopsy ⚜ Word Lists: Forensics ⚜ Law-Related
— stars & space dividers (purple)
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George Orwell:
Probably it is better to put off using words as long as possible and get one’s meanings as clear as one can through pictures and sensations. Afterward one can choose – not simply accept – the phrases that will best cover the meaning, and then switch round and decide what impression one’s words are likely to make on another person. This last effort of the mind cuts out all stale or mixed images, all prefabricated phrases, needless repetitions, and humbug and vagueness generally. But one can often be in doubt about the effect of a word or a phrase, and one needs rules that one can rely on when instinct fails. I think the following rules will cover most cases:
Never use a metaphor, simile or other figure of speech which you are used to seeing in print.
Never use a long word where a short one will do.
If it is possible to cut a word out, always cut it out.
Never use the passive where you can use the active.
Never use a foreign phrase, a scientific word or a jargon word if you can think of an everyday English equivalent.
Break any of these rules sooner than say anything outright barbarous.
These rules sound elementary, and so they are, but they demand a deep change of attitude in anyone who has grown used to writing in the style now fashionable. One could keep all of them and still write bad English, but one could not write the kind of stuff that I quoted in those five specimens at the beginning of this article.
Source More: George Orwell
Enemies to Lovers (and vice versa)
How to write Enemies to Lovers + Dialogue Prompts
Oblivious Enemies to Lovers Prompts
Enemies to Lovers: Falling for the flirt
Enemies to Lovers: Co-worker Edition Part I
Enemies to Lovers: Co-worker Edition Part II
Enemies to Lovers: Meet Ugly College Edition
Enemies to Lovers: Drama Club Edition
Enemies to Lovers: Apocalypse AU
Enemies to Lovers: Band Edition
Enemies to Lovers: Assassins Edition
Enemies to Lovers: Martial Arts Edition
Enemies to Lovers: Given up on life
Lovers to enemies
Reasons for lovers turning to enemies
Exes to Lovers
Exes to lovers prompts
Exes to lovers dialogue
Friends to Lovers
Reluctant allies to friends to lovers dynamic
Friends to lovers Prompts
Flirty friends to lovers Prompts
Friends with benefits to lovers Prompts
Friends to Lovers Ideas
Best friends to lovers Prompts
Childhood friends to lovers Prompts
Childhood friends to enemies to lovers Prompts
More:
Enemies to friends with benefits Prompts
Enemies to friends Prompts
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MUSICPLAYERS
marketing promotion are literal hell, esp you're introvert. wdym i need to chat, call with everyone, and adapt to their interest. *sigh, get up, open sns and still done it*
Romantic Student Things
Locking eyes in the hallway like it’s a damn movie scene, except the only soundtrack is the sound of someone dropping their binder and cursing loudly in the background.
Scribbling little notes in the margins of textbooks, but instead of love letters, they’re inside jokes and sarcastic insults that somehow make them fall harder.
That moment when they both reach for the same book in the library and freeze... her fingers brushing his, the air between them suddenly too much and not enough all at once.
Staying up way too late to study together, but absolutely failing because they keep finding excuses to talk about literally anything else except what’s actually on the exam.
Leaving anonymous notes in each other’s lockers, but instead of sweet nothings, it’s absolute nonsense like “Your hair looked aggressively good today” and “You’re dangerously close to making me fall in love with you, stop it.”
Sitting next to each other in class, acting completely normal, while their knees are pressed together under the desk and their hearts are losing their minds over it.
Having full-on mental breakdowns over finals together, only for one of them to randomly say, “I think I might love you.” Because academic stress and emotional realizations go hand in hand, apparently.
Passing handwritten notes in class, except they’re not just notes, they’re confessions hidden inside random doodles and lyrics that will mean nothing to anyone else but them.
Accidentally falling asleep next to each other while studying, and waking up to realize their hands are still tangled together like some kind of cruel joke the universe is playing on them.
Finding the one place on campus where they can be alone, an empty classroom, a forgotten stairwell, a rooftop and making it theirs. Because stolen moments always feel more real than anything else.
That absolutely insane moment when they see each other outside of school for the first time, no uniforms, no backpacks, just them, and suddenly, they’re seeing each other differently.
Staying after school to “work on a project”, but the only thing getting worked on is their ability to pretend they’re not completely, recklessly, falling for each other.
Supporting each other during nerve-wracking presentations by holding eye contact across the room, because if one of them crashes and burns, at least they’ll have company in hell.
That heart-stopping moment during graduation when they realize this might be the last time they ever get to see each other like this, in this life, in this stage, before everything changes.
Finally saying screw it and kissing in the middle of campus, because the real test wasn’t their exams, it was this.
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