verbheavy
Verbheavy is a descriptive term used in linguistics and stylistics to describe texts, speeches, or languages that favor verbs over other parts of speech, especially nouns and adjectives. It denotes a tendency toward action-oriented syntax and dynamic pacing rather than nominal grounding. The term is informal and used primarily as a qualitative descriptor in analyses of style rather than a formal typological category.
Origin and usage: verbheavy is a modern compound formed from "verb" and "heavy." It appears in discussions
Characteristics: high event density, frequent chaining of verb phrases, relatively sparse nominal phrases, and a preference
Examples: verb-heavy sentence: "Rain pours, tires screech, lights flash, pedestrians scatter." In contrast, a noun-heavy version
Applications and implications: in journalism, sports commentary, action-oriented prose, and emergency dispatch narratives, verb-heavy styles convey
See also: verb phrase, nominal density, writing style, action-oriented prose.