#writetip
Who is talking? Do you always need a tag? Advice from how-to-write books say it should be clear from the dialogue, who is speaking. For the longest time, I interpreted this to mean that the character should have some unique way of speaking.
I don’t like to read dialogue where I get distracted with unique speech patterns, so I don’t like to write that way.
I finally understood what the advice means. The context and what the character has to say should give the reader enough information to know who is talking. If it doesn’t then a tag is needed.
If you need a tag, you could try using character movements or thoughts instead of a tag.
So back to my original thought. I now get the advice. So here’s an example.
A brother and sister are talking.
“What?” – can’t tell who’s speaking. Consider a dialogue tag or other method of indicating who is speaking.
“Mom loved you more because you’re a girl. She liked to dress you up and do your hair. I had nothing but scrapes and bruises to offer.” – easy to tell the brother is speaking, so no dialogue tag needed.

Thank you for this insight. I can use the context to indicate who’s speaking!
Now I don’t have to make my characters talk funny any more just so that the reader knows who’s speaking. 😉
Yeah, that’s how I interpreted the advice too. (*blushes*)
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It’s funny how long it takes to learn all of these things. Let me know when you make one of these discoveries. Have fun writing today. I’m off sailing for the day.
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