announced uttered replied answered declared shouted laughed whispered exclaimed intoned averred remarked commented cried declaimed Many times in dialogue, you don't need to say anything in place of 'said.' Marsha stood up. "Are you ready to leave?" "I sure am." Edward put on his coat. "All right, then, let's go."
It is when you are not directly quoting the person who said the phrase in question. But using your own words to explain what was said.
Strolled,Jogged,Waddled,Ran,Raced.
Instead of 'and' you could say, 'as well as', 'also'. If using 'also' you'd need to add punctuation: 'Jim, also John, attended the dinner,'
Now that I've done exactly what you said I'd never be able to do I hope you are ready to eat your words.
i am wondering the same question but maybe try using the person that u are talking about name more
said, remarked, agreed, announced, whispered, shouted, yelled
The preacher said I exhort you to denounce the ways of Shaitan and in the words of E.T. to be good instead.
using picture instead of words
makaton is used by pictures as words instead of using words
Allow and admit is what it said in the thesaurus.
Instead of using "we," consider using phrases like "our team," "together," or "all of us" to promote inclusivity and collaboration.
qualitative
stated declare assert deliver affirm
to shout, to whisper, to inform, to be told, to tell, to say...
creativity, vision, inspiration.
It is when you are not directly quoting the person who said the phrase in question. But using your own words to explain what was said.
There are a couple hundred words that can be used instead of the word said. Some examples are, replied, says, cried, shouted, and answered,