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I'm sure that if I did a "most frequently used word" review of my stories, the word would be "cock."![]()
Stallion, surely?
https://prowritingaid.com/en/Home/Index
This one has a repeated phrases report. The free-use version only allows 3k words at a pop, but it's there.
I use it for a couple of the reports when I have time to process something in small chunks. The free version used to allow a lot more words, which made it far more useful, and a standard part of my editing process. Not so much any more.
I've had that issue. But personally, 'said' draws me out and draws attention to itself so I also dislike using he said she said. My approach is to try move into dialogue seamlessly without using said. I usually put the dialogue after the character's thoughts, or actions, or expressions etc.
He counted nine seconds before the thunder followed the strike of lightning. Gloved hands gripped the steering wheel firmly as he cast her a grin, "You ready?"
I like this technique. A nitpick, though:
Should be a full stop after "grin". Comma would be correct if you were using a speech tag like "he said", "he "asked", etc. etc. But grinning isn't speaking.

Ohhh. I didn't know that. To me a full stop completes the sentence and the dialogue should then start on a new line, but doing that might obscure who spoke it, whereas I feel the comma makes it clear. Also I find that the only time I start dialogue on a new line is when I've gone from person A to person B.
I haven't had a reader bring it up with me though, but I am consistent so maybe they're used to it.
I guess that's what happens when you don't have formal training in writing, you follow your own rules.![]()
"Gloved hands gripped the steering wheel firmly as he cast her a grin" is a full sentence. The "You ready?" follows on from that but it isn't part of the sentence, so a full stop after "grin" is appropriate.
The comma shows up next to speech when the speech is part of that sentence. For example, if you'd written:
Tom said, "You ready?"
then that's a single sentence. "Tom said" isn't a sentence on its own; it needs the quoted words to be complete. So it gets a comma.
Ohhh. I didn't know that. To me a full stop completes the sentence and the dialogue should then start on a new line, but doing that might obscure who spoke it, whereas I feel the comma makes it clear. Also I find that the only time I start dialogue on a new line is when I've gone from person A to person B.