admitted. announced. answered. asserted. attested. averred. avowed.
blabbed. blared. blasted. blathered. boasted. bragged. brayed.
claimed. clarified. conceded. confided. contradicted. criticized. cried. crowed.
declaimed. declared.
elaborated. elucidated. enunciated. exclaimed.
fibbed. fumed.
gabbed. gossiped.
haggled. hinted.
indicated.
jabbered.
murmured. muttered.
opined.
predicted. proclaimed.
quacked. quipped.
railed. raved. recommended. repeated. replied. responded. retorted. riposted.
simmered. sobbed. stammered. stated. suggested.
talked.
uttered.
whimpered. whined. whispered.
yipped.
shouted.
A vivid verb for the word heard is hearing. A vivid verb is a verb which is specific and found to be interesting.
He said his name.
He SHOUTED his name.
bellow, shout, roar
clearly
announced
beheld
glow
really stupid and dumb
Tug is another powerful verb for pull
Yes it is. Said is the part tense and past participle of 'say' which is a transitive verb
are is a helping verb that is what it said on google.com
She is a pronoun, and said is a verb.
Plod; tread.
commanded
He said his name. He SHOUTED his name.
Tug is another powerful verb for pull
"Inspect" is a more powerful verb than "look" as it implies a more thorough examination or evaluation of something.
chop
snip
introduction,.
I do not think that fall is a particularly weak verb, but in some cases tumble might be more evocative.
"Said" is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb "to say": He said he did not want any more asparagus.
Examples include march or stride.
Powerful
To use an action verb for "said," you can replace it with more descriptive verbs that convey how the speech was delivered. For example, you could use "shouted," "whispered," "muttered," or "yelled" instead of just "said." This adds more detail and helps to paint a clearer picture of how the words were spoken.