8 Proven Methods to Reduce Essay Word Count, AI Included
Table of contents
Yona Schnitzer
We all know how hard it is to write long essays with a minimum word count.
But sometimes, we're faced with the opposite challenge - keeping our essays under a maximum count.
How to Reduce Essay Word Count
1. Use an active voice instead of passive 2. Spot the fluff 3. Eliminate redundant words 4. Shorten wordy phrases 5. Stop using "What" and "There" as subjects 6. Drop the conjunctions 7. Forget the running starts 8. Use shorter words
Anyone who has ever tried covering complex topics with a maximum word ceiling can tell you that it can be challenging to reduce the word count without sacrificing the meaning or flow of your piece.
In this article, I’ll give you 8 easy tips to help you reduce the word count in your essays without compromising the quality of your writing.
So, without further ado, here are 8 proven methods to reduce essay word count:
1. use an active voice instead of passive.
Using an active voice makes your writing more direct and concise. Passive voice often adds unnecessary words and can make your writing sound less engaging. For instance:
By switching to the passive voice, we’ve reduced our overall word count, while also making the sentence more engaging.
Be sure to check out our full guide on how to nail the active voice .
2. Spot the fluff
One of the easiest ways to reduce word count is to identify any unnecessary or redundant information in your piece. Whether it’s drawn out introductions, or repetitive information, there’s always something that you can do without. Some tools, like Wordtune can actually help you identify areas where you can afford to shorten your writing, or even entire paragraphs that you can cut out.
3. Eliminate redundant words
Many sentences contain words that don't add any value to their meaning and can be easily removed. Very, for example, is a very common offender (see what I did there?). Instead of writing It was very cold outside, just write It was cold outside.
Here are some more examples of redundant words to help you get the idea:
4. Shorten wordy phrases
Another way to reduce word count is to identify and shorten wordy phrases.
For example, instead of writing "due to the fact that, " you can write "because."
Once you get in the habit of shortening your phrases, it will be like second nature. There are also some tools that can help you with that, like Wordtune's "shorten" feature, which can suggest shorter ways to write a sentence without sacrificing clarity.
5. Stop using "What" and "There" as subjects
Using "What" or "There" as the subject of a sentence will add unnecessary words to your writing. Instead, you can rephrase the sentence to make the subject more specific.
For example:
6. Drop the conjunctions
Conjunctions such as "and," "but," and "however" can be used to connect two independent statements, but they also add unnecessary words to your sentence. Instead of creating one, long sentence that is put together by conjunctions, try writing two separate sentences instead. Usually you’ll find that these end up using less words overall.
For example:
This may seem like a small difference, but over the course of an entire paper, these small changes will really add up.
7. Forget the running starts
In writing, a "running start" refers to a sentence that begins with a word or phrase that does not provide any useful information and can be easily removed without affecting the meaning of the sentence. Common examples of running starts include words like "it," "there," "here," "this," and "that." These words often add unnecessary words to a sentence and can make the writing sound less direct and less engaging. Removing them can help to make your writing more concise and to the point.
Pro Tip: Wordtune's "Shorten" feature is great at eliminating running starts.
8. Use shorter words
Sometimes, an assignment has a page limit rather than a word count, in this instance, it can be worth it to identify words that can be replaced with shorter words of the same meaning. For example, instead of writing " utilize ," you can write " use ."
Here are some other common words that can afford to lose a few letters:
Less is more
If you’re looking for tips on how to INCREASE word count, check out this article .
There are plenty of ways to reduce your word count without sacrificing the quality of your writing. Use these tips and tricks the next time you find yourself desperately trying to squeeze too many sentences onto one page. Keep in mind that whenever you shorten a text, you’re usually improving it by making it more readable and accessible to a larger audience.
Remember, when it comes to writing - less, is usually more.
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5 Best ways to Make an Essay Shorter
Chris Drew (PhD)
Dr. Chris Drew is the founder of the Helpful Professor. He holds a PhD in education and has published over 20 articles in scholarly journals. He is the former editor of the Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education. [Image Descriptor: Photo of Chris]
Learn about our Editorial Process
If you are like me, you will find that you often struggle to stay within the word count in your essays.
In this article, I will show you exactly how to reduce your word count in your essay.
If you go over the word count in an essay, there are some strategies to make your essay shorter that make sure you keep your marks high and, sometimes, make them even higher.
The trick to going over the word count is seeing this as a positive: you now have the chance to only present your absolute best arguments.
This is a luxury other students in your class just don’t have. Reducing your word count is actually your chance to get even further ahead!
The best essays have no dull, irrelevant or sub-par content. Every paragraph is on-point and designed to win you more and more marks. When editing your work, keep this in mind.
Below, I introduce five important strategies that will help you to reduce your word count in a way that will actually increase your mark!
- Delete your three Worst Paragraphs. …
- Listen for Weaknesses using Google Translate or Microsoft Excel Read-out-Loud.
- Re-Read the Marking Criteria.
- Shorten Paragraphs over 7 Sentences Long.
- Delete Irrelevant Words.
1. Delete your three Worst Paragraphs
I usually aim to go over my word count intentionally so I can creatively make the essay shorter in a way that increases my marks.
If I go over the word count, I can look back over my piece and find my worst performing paragraphs and remove them.
This not only helps me to ensure I present my best work to the teacher, it also forces me to admit that some of my writing is better than others. It keeps me critical of myself and always aiming for improvement.
Removing the worst paragraphs of an essay also ensures there are less boring, pointless or unanalytical sections of an essay. It means that the paragraphs I submit are the best sections – and that the teacher will be impressed throughout the piece.
To assess which paragraphs are best and worst, I do the following things:
- Find the paragraphs with the least or worst references in them. Teachers will scan over a paragraph to assess the quality of the references in them. Paragraphs with minimal referencing, too much referencing of just one source, or only references to non-academic sources, instantly get marked down by the teacher before they’re even read. These are also often the paragraphs that provide the least depth of information. That is because finding sources to reference in a paragraph often leads to adding detail that the source has provided.
- Find the paragraphs that are least convincing. When I re-read my paragraphs, sometimes I just think ‘the argument here is my weakest’. These are the ones I want to cut: they’re ones that won’t get me top marks. Teachers will lower your marks for any paragraph that doesn’t shine – so you’re best removing it.
- Rate your paragraphs out of 10. I often tell my students to delete their three worst paragraphs and they say ‘I like all of them!’ In this case, you will have to get brutal with yourself: rate every paragraph out of 10. This will help you make the hard decisions about which to lose.
- Combine two paragraphs into one. Sometimes I really like one sentence from a paragraph but don’t like the rest. If this is the case for you, have a go at extracting those good sentences from one paragraph and placing them in another one. Then, you can delete the not-so-good sentences from the original paragraph. If you do this, make sure all paragraphs still cohere around one key point.
2. Listen for Weaknesses using Google Translate or Microsoft Excel Read-out-Loud
Google Translate and Microsoft Excel both have read-out-loud options. Google Translate’s option is the easiest.
For Google Translate, simply search for ‘Google Translate’ on your internet search engine (or just click here ) to access it. Then, copy and paste the text into the translate box and press the ‘listen’ button:
For Microsoft Excel, you will need paste the whole essay into any cell and then activate the read out loud option.
This procedure is somewhat more complicated than Google Translate, but if you want to give it a go, you can get instructions from the Microsoft help website and go from there
Hearing your paper read out loud back to you can help you to identify which paragraphs or sentences are worth removing.
Here are some things to keep in mind while listening to the computer read your paper out loud to you:
- If a sentence feels like it’s too long and exhausting to listen to, you can bet your teacher will be exhausted, too;
- If a phrase seems awkward to hear, it will be awkward to read;
- If the paper seems to have lost its focus on the topic area, you’ll need to remove that section or edit it to ensure it links to the essay question.
Pause the read-out-loud each time you find a sentence long or awkward and work on shortening it.
Too often, students think long, complicated sentences with fancy-sounding words will get them marks. In reality, it’s the opposite.
Being able to describe complex concepts in a very easy, understandable way is a skill all top students learn to master.
The read-out-loud option can help you to see your paper from your marker’s perspective. Use it to your advantage and listen out for anything that sounds complicated, confusing, awkward or exhausting. Delete it or shorten it immediately.
Remember, the goal is to have your paper sounding short and clear.
3. Re-Read the Marking Criteria
When editing your work, it is best to have the marking criteria by your side at all times.
The marking criteria is the list of things the teacher is looking for when marking your essay. Sometimes it’s also called:
- Marking Criteria;
- Indicative Content;
- Marking Rubric;
- Learning Outcomes
These should be easy to find. Go to your course webpage (usually on Blackboard, Canvas, or Moodle depending on your university) and find where your teacher has provided details about your assessment. If there are marking criteria, this is where it would be.
Sometimes, teachers don’t provide marking criteria.
If the teacher has simply provided an essay topic or question, that means the chances are they don’t have a list of outcomes they are marking your piece against. In these instances, you will have to simply rely on the essay question.
When you have your marking criteria or essay question by your side, read each paragraph then look back to your marking criteria.
You need to ask yourself:
- Does this paragraph directly answer the essay question or marking criteria?
- Does this paragraph add new information that helps me answer the essay question?
If your paragraph is not linked directly to the essay question or marking criteria, you’ve just identified the paragraph you need to remove to reduce your word count.
4. Shorten Paragraphs over 7 Sentences Long
Teachers hate long paragraphs. Teachers are just like you and me. They get bored very fast.
Chances are, any paragraph over 7 sentences isn’t being fully read. The teacher might have only read the first three sentences and made their judgement about your work based on those three sentences!
That’s why the ideal paragraph should be between 4 and 7 sentences long. This length helps to ensure:
- You haven’t gone off on a tangent;
- You have provided some explanatory or example sentences, but not too many;
- You have focused only on one key idea in the paragraph.
Your paragraphs that are more than 7 sentences long will be your low-hanging fruit for reducing your word count. Read through each of these paragraphs and try to find a way to reduce it to only 6 sentences. Find those sentences that seem to drag on or add nothing useful to your discussion and delete them.
By reducing all paragraphs over 7 sentences long, you won’t only bring your word count down. You will also make your essay much clearer and easy to read.
In this way, you’re both reducing your word count and increasing your mark.
5. Delete Irrelevant Words
Going through your paper and deleting irrelevant words can often save you several hundred words and could shorten your essay enough to get you back within the required word count.
Irrelevant words are words that are overly descriptive, redundant, too emotive, or in first-person. These words tend to get the same point across in far more words than necessary.
Furthermore, you will find that in removing overly descriptive, redundant, emotive and first-person words, your work will be much improved.
This is because academic writing is supposed to be formal and direct. Writing too many words can make your marker think you have poor communication skills and do not understand academic writing requirements.
Check below for examples of how to reduce your word count by removing overly descriptive, redundant, overly emotive and first-person language.
- Overly Descriptive: The amazing thing about the industrial revolution was that it brought about enormous changes to the ways people transported themselves and communicated across the globe in such a short amount of time.
- Alternative: The industrial revolution brought about rapid changes in transportation and communication globally.
- Redundant: The sum of five hundred dollars.
- Alternative: $500
- Redundant: It was quite unique.
- Alternative: It was unique.
- Redundant: It was triangular in shape.
- Alternative: It was triangular.
- Too Emotive: The disgusting thing about communism is that it refuses to allow poor everyday people to improve their lives by creating their own businesses that might flourish and really help our their communities, too!
- Alternative: Communism prevents citizens from starting businesses that can help bring people and their communities out of poverty.
- In first Person: In summary, I believe that the Industrial Revolution was good for the whole world.
- Alternative: In summary, the Industrial Revolution was good for the world.
- In first Person: This author argues that Thomas Edison was the greatest mind of his time.
- Alternative: Thomas Edison was the greatest mind of his time.
Making your essay shorter can sometimes be an absolute nightmare.
By following the above five steps, you can find easy ways to reduce your word count while also improving your work.
If you are an advanced or ambitious student, you might find that you always go over the word count. This isn’t necessarily a problem.
Try to look at going over the word count as a positive thing. Going over the word count means you have the freedom to only present your best work. You have the chance to delete anything that isn’t absolutely focused on gaining you marks.
In the end, your final submission will be cleaner, easier to read and easier to mark. Hopefully, this will see your marks growing even more!
Let’s review one more time the five top ways the best students reduce their word count in an essay:
Five Top Ways to Make an Essay Shorter
- Delete your three Worst Paragraphs
- Use Google Translate or Microsoft Excel to Read your Paper out Loud
- Re-Read the Marking Criteria
- Shorten Paragraphs over 6 Sentences Long
- Delete Irrelevant Words
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How to decrease your word count, without ruining your point.
Here's our comprehensive guide to writing shorter sentences, without affecting the strength of your argument
Hugo Whitehead
Whether you're at school, university or writing your thirteenth book, you’ve probably got an incurable habit of writing more than you're supposed to. One minute you're struggling to get words on the page, the next you're way over your required word count.
To ease your worries, we've put together a comprehensive guide to writing shorter sentences, without changing the meaning of your content.
Check what is being counted:
First of all, check what is actually being counted. Often, your bibliography, footnotes, appendixes, and image captions aren’t counted in the word limit, so make sure you aren’t including them accidentally.
Watch out for repetition:
Without even realizing it, people will over explain and repeat themselves. Sometimes even good writers will include information twice. For example, “I went to university at the University of Technology Sydney”. Did you notice it? I didn't need to say “to university” because it is already stated in “University of Technology Sydney”. Instead, I should have said “I went to the University of Technology Sydney”. It might sound simple, but you’ll probably want to get someone else to read over your work to find these, as they’re rather hard to catch.
Remove adverbs:
Adverbs are usually unnecessary, and can weaken your writing. A quick thesaurus search will help you find a stronger synonym. For example, changing "very neat" to "immaculate" sounds better, and is one word shorter. You can find out more about the impact of adverbs on your writing in this article .
Remove adjectives:
In some cases, there is no need to over describe something. Especially, if you are trying to cut down you word count, you don’t need to say the day was cloudless, there was little wind, humidity was perfect and it was a lovely 27 degrees. Shorten it by using ideas that are familiar to people e.g. ‘it was a perfect summer day’. Your readers will know what a perfect summer day is like so you don’t need to waste words explaining it.
Use contractions:
This is a rather sneaky trick, but by contracting two words into one, you're easily reducing your word count without changing the meaning at all. For example, change “I have” to “I’ve” or “Would not” to “Wouldn’t”. Be careful though, if you are writing in formal context for an essay, CV or assignment, it’s best to avoid using contractions as they give a rather colloquial tone to your writing.
Use commas:
Sentences are typically used to convey one idea. However, if you can link two of your sentences together to discuss the same idea, do it. By using a comma or conjunction to link two sentences, you're bound to remove some words in the middle. For example, “Emily was so mean to me. She used to bully me” can be changed to “Emily was so mean because she used to bully me”. Make sure you don’t try and link every sentence as it will ruin the flow of your writing.
Eliminate wordy transitions:
Most good writers will try and link their paragraphs together with some form of transition. Whilst this gives flow from paragraph to paragraph, they can be wordy. Try and use a single word to link sentences. For example, use ‘Additionally’ instead of ‘In addition’, or ‘Opposingly’ instead of ‘In contrast’.
Swap out phrases for words:
From time to time, writers will use common phrases or idioms to help explain a situation. They are an easy way to cut out words. For examples, change “Volkswagen Golfs are a dime a dozen in Sydney” for “Volkswagen Golfs are common in Sydney”. Another example is “Jimmy was feeling under the weather on Monday after a big weekend”, which could be changed to “Jimmy was sick after a big weekend”.
Pick your best work:
If you have gone through you work and can’t find any easy spots to reduce your word count, the best thing to do is to re-read your writing and determine what your strongest points are. Focus on a few main points and keep the parts that you feel have the strongest impact on your reader.
It’s not an easy process. Cutting down your word count is a good skill to have, and no doubt you’ll have to do it at some point in the future.
Let Outwrite do it:
Can’t be bothered to do this all yourself? Check out Outwrite’s paraphrasing tool . It can help you rewrite sentences to make them shorter, clearer, and more compelling. Just sign up to our Pro plan, set your Rewrite goal, then get to work!
How to Reduce Your Essay Word Count
When it comes to writing essays, there are two frequent issues that arise; the word count is either too low or too high for the stated range of the essay. For those who perpetually end up with too few words, you need to figure out ways to increase your essay word count . For those who frequently find themselves with too many words on the page, there are some simple steps to take when editing to help reduce the number of words while at the same time making it a stronger piece of writing. Below are some suggestions to do this.
Rank Your Arguments
If you find you’re well above your word count maximum, the first step is to rank the points you use to substantiate your argument. By ranking the importance of the arguments you make in the essay, you can eliminate ones which aren’t as important as others, keeping the essay strong while removing large portions of writing. If you don’t want to eliminate any of the points, you can still reduce word count by mentioning all the arguments, but not writing as much detail about those not as strong as the more important points.
Focus on the Main Point
Once you determine what the important arguments are for your essay, read through it looking for any paragraphs or sentences which fail to address your main argument(s) or topic. It’s easy to accidentally go off on tangents when writing, and eliminating these tangents can help reduce word count. The more focused you can remain on your topic and arguments, the more concise your writing will be.
Use the Best Verb
This may sound obvious, but a lot of writers don’t do this well. When writing, always use the perfect verb rather than one that’s close, but not perfect. When you use the best verb possible, it will reduce the amount of writing you do in most cases. This is due to the fact that when you use a verb that’s not quite correct, you usually need to add more words to clarify your meaning. Here’s an example:
“They beat the opposing team by a lot of points.”
While “beat” is accurate in this case, it’s not the perfect verb because they not only beat the team, they beat the team by a lot. Using the better verb “trounce” in this instant will reduce the word count while still giving the same meaning as the longer sentence.
“They trounced the opposing team.”
Remove Adverbs
Look through your essay and see if you find any adverbs, especially adverbs which have “ly” endings. In many instances, these adverbs end up being filler words which end up being placed in the writing because it’s the way we talk, but the words don’t add anything beneficial to the actual essay. Go through the essay and ask if each one is needed and remove those that aren’t. Some words you may want to look out for are (click on image to expand to see better)
Remove Adjectives
Much in the same way as adverbs make their way into writing, multiple adjectives are used when one (or none at all) would suffice. Read the essay to see if all of the adjectives used are needed, and remove those which don’t add to the meaning of the sentence being written. Some common adjectives to look for are:
able, bad, big, different, early, first, few, good, great, high, important, large, last, little, long, new, next, old, other, own, public, right, same, small, young
(Photo courtesy of Matt Hampel )
I hate maximum word counts because I can never stay under them. Why do teachers do this to me? Why can’t I just write as much as I want?
If you saw what the majority of students turn in for homework, you would understand perfectly why there is either a maximum or minimum (sometimes both)for writing assignments.
This is such a challenge sometimes. I hate editing because I love all my words. It helps to know how to reduce the word count even though I don’t want to do it. I think teachers should let us write as much as we want. Isn’t that helping us to be better students than limiting the amount we can write?
Limiting the amount you can write is actually something that can help you write better. It forces you to clean up your writing and only make the most necessary points which will make it more concise and accurate. Editing is more important than the actual writing to write well for most people. Your teacher is doing you a great service by limiting the amount you can write.
This isn’t a problem. The problem is reaching a minimum word count. Anyone who complains about writing too much doesn’t know what a real writing problem is.
You’re correct! Because obviously there is only one type of writing style!
A classic case of someone thinking that the world revolves around them and not understanding that just because it’s not a problem they have, others can’t have it. A very narrow world view. You might want to actually try and see things from the perspective of others every once in awhile.
I write too much. I’ wordy. I always have to reduce word count. It’s as much of n issue for me is not having enough words is for you. I hate it when people dismiss problems of others jus because it happens not to be a problem for them.
This may not be an issue for you, but it is for many people like me. It’s pretty self-centered of you to think that only your specific problems matter.
Clearly your still in primary school. Just to inform you while I was in grades 6-12 I was always over the minimum/maximum word limits. Today in college I’m easily 1500+ over my maximum limit without headers, intros, and sources. I’m not saying your issue isn’t real I’m just explaining there’s always a flip side to a problem/issue.
I’m wordy. Far too wordy. I do my best writing when I have to edit myself and these ideas are good places for me to begin. I wish I could stay under my professor’s word count limits, but it never happens I guess it’s better than writer’s block, but it’s still an issue.
Learning to write concisely will improve your writing so much. It’s not easy, but it can make a huge impact on the points you’re trying to convey. it’s worth practicing it.
Yes, I agree!
I’m wordy. My best writing is edited, and these will help. I wish I could adhere to word limits. Better than writer’s block!
Editing is such an under appreciated part of writing. I love the quote that says that great writing is composed on the editing block. Reducing your word count shouldn’t be viewed as a chore but as an opportunity to improve your writing. Being able to get your point across concisely is a great skill to have.
I agree. Most students don’t realize the importance of good editing and how it can greatly improve their writing. I believe students should spend at least as much time editing their essays as they do writing them.
I always do this! I tend to write double the word count and spend the same amount of time editing it, it not more time! It’s so difficult and I have it but I enjoy the idea of it making me write better and improve my academic writing. The most difficult bit is that I feel it’s all relevant and then having to condense it as a academic writer whilst still making the assignment flow. Argh! Uni problems!
Me Too!! I’m a bit crazy with writing! ;p
This is soooooo true and they don’t really teach you this in school. They tell you to write, but not to edit. I would have loved it if I was given a document that I had to keep the same meaning and important points, but shorten it by 200 words. It’s a skill I didn’t learn well in school but you need in the real world.
This is a new problem for me. I used to always be under word count, but recently I’ve started to always go over word count. I thought that being under was bad, but being over seems to be even more difficult. I’m not good at editing so it takes me so long to get under word count.
Editing is a lot like writing. The more you practice, the better you will get at it. Don’t get frustrated and continue to work on your editing skills. You’ll be surprised at how much better your writing gets the more you practice them. Good luck!
Seriously, who ever needs to reduce their essay word count? Everyone I know is always trying to make their word count. Do these people just write random things to get that high of a word count? That makes no sense…
ha ha. I assume you’re still in middle or high school with a comment like this. One day you’ll learn that writing can be fun and interesting, and when that happens, you won’t have enough space to write everything you want.
The thing is I am in middle school and always go 1000 words over the limit in my assignments. A good strategy that I use is to create a new document and copy and paste each paragraph. each time I copy a paragraph I try to delete some unnecessary words. This strategy works really well and it helps me a lot when doing assignments
For me i always go over because as I’m writing and sourcing things, I find other useful sections that provide good arguments and compassion’s. Currently I’m on a 3000 word essays and Iv done 4700 without an intro. My references are 700 so I’m technically 1000 over. I’m really struggling to condense it.
There’s an easy way to reduce your word count that works great for me every time. JUST DON”T WRITE SO MUCH!
I don’t know if you were being serious or not, but for some people that’s easier said than done. I tend to be wordy in my first drafts, and so when I go back through I cut a lot of words while editing. If I only wrote the exact number of words required the first time through, my grades would be a lot worse than they are. When I edit, I make my essays a lot better. I think most people do. If you’re only writing first drafts of any assignment, you’re not putting your best work forward. While your advice seems like it’s simple, it actually is bad advice for those who want to get good grades.
I think it’s difficult for people who have a hard time reaching a word count minimum to understand how difficult it is for those of us who have a hard time staying under word count. Although they are completely opposite problems, they are just as difficult for both sides. It’s kind of like two sides of the same coin.
It is, but those needing more words can source and add information, arguments and comparisons. But for those that have already done this it is difficult to cut and priorities your work based on what’s relevant or proves a better argument.
What if you have a lot to say on the topic? Should I just dumb down my writing because the teacher says that I have a maximum word count that I’m not supposed to exceed? Sometimes it’s important to write a lot when there’s a lot to be said.
Some of us like to write with detail and that can also make your word count extremely high. By toning down your piece and being a bit more general, it might also help decrease your word count.
I worry when I do this that I’m losing marks as I’m not explaining myself from cutting the work I did
I recently have found that I no longer have trouble reaching assigned word counts, but now I am constantly going over them. I’m not sure how this happened. Even worse, I think being over word count is even harder than being under it. Who would have thought?
I think this is a common problem as people become better writers. As you become more confident in your writing, you tend to write more. The previous writing problems turn into editing problems. the good news is that as you get better at writing, your wordiness will tend to go down again. Just like it to practice to increase your word count, it will take practice to reduce your word count as well.
I happened to be a wordy writer. I never seem to be able to stay under the assigned word count on my essays. I found that one of the best ways to reduce the amount that I write is to take the time to outline before I even start writing. If I outline and I see that the outline is too long, I know my writing is going to be long. That gives me the opportunity to focus on the most important points of the essay which helps to keep the word count down. I don’t know if this will work for everybody, but it works well for me and I thought I would share it in case it helps somebody else.
Use contractions when possible, use active voice and leave out the unnecessary adjectives. Be careful of going on tangents and stay on topic. Idioms and cliches are you enemy.
I’m 478 words over my essay maximum and I have no idea how I’m going to get it under the limit. All the words are important and if I cut anything, it ruins it. Why do I always have so much to say?
Were you able to get your essay under the limit? Learning to be concise in your writing is difficult, but it will make your writing a lot better in the long run.
Well Stephanie, you don’t have to take out anything! If you just write, maybe your teacher will give you easier stuff!
No, not quite.
Hey Stephanie, i totally feel you 🙁 I’m really wordy and i feel that adds to the uniqueness of my essays but sometimes it does get out of hand. Removing those words kind of ruins the flow of my essays and i don’t really know how to go about it :/
The best thing you can do for your writing is to learn to edit well.
That’s easy to say, but how do you learn to edit well? I want to reduce the number of words in my essays, but they all seem important. I don’t want to edit out words that are important to the essay. If all seem important, then how do you choose which ones to eliminate?
Practice. Editing is like writing…the more you do it, the better you become. You don’t even have to write to practice editing. take something someone else has written and see if you can make it read more cleanly. It can be fun and addicting.
You don’t even have to write to practice editing
Take the ‘even’ out for example.
Hi everyone! I need some help. I want to write a Book, but I can’t think of anything to write about! So can anyone Please Hep Me!!!
Write about the journey that lead you to writing a book. All the notable series of events
That is a really boring story. (At least mine is)
One day My friends Zoey, wrote a book, and it was really good, so I started to write one as well…
See, boring.
But thanks!
My time has come! I’ve got a lot of ideas, but I want to read the book, not write it. How about a person who has a normal, twenty-first century life falls into a different time, and everyone keeps insisting they belong there as a person the protagonist has never heard of. The protagonist knows that they don’t, but as time goes on, you, as the author, slowly reveal that everyone from that time is right and the protagonist was imagining their other life. Just an idea!
Write about something that you like or love tho do. I wrote a book about animals.
Of, and, but, by are evil words for me. Always get me.
im 1000 words (and counting) over the word limit, its due tomorrow and i wanna die
A few other tips:
1) Use the search bar to find the times you have said ‘that’ because most of the time you don’t actually need it for the sentence to make sense.
2) Also, you can try and reduce a phrase into one word. A a cause of this… = consequently…
3) If you are writing someone’s name (eg. an author or a president), then you can just use their surname.
4) This tip works particularly if you are writing a history essay, I always just say ‘America’ instead of ‘the USA’/’the US’. Also ‘The USSR’ instead of ‘The Soviet Union’ (also just say Britain, not the UK or Great Britain).
5) Sometimes you just have to look through and consider re-wording sentences: John Gaddis’s argument states that “Kennan was the architect of the Cold War” Gaddis disputes “Kennan was the architect of the Cold War”
“consequently” obviosuly does not mean “as a cause of this”
Great Britain is not the same as the UK.
I mustn’t write more than 150 words in my essay and it’s making me crazy :C
That’s not an essay, that’s a paragraph! I’m having trouble getting below 750.
Jesus Christ, what?
I did not say anything.
I’m submitting my English essay into the departments contest and the limit is 800 I originally had 1,332. These tips from both articles and comments are helping bunches let’s hope I can get it under the limit!
I’m 1500 words over on my dissertation.. i’ve used all these methods and i’m still way over the word limit.. H E L P
Have you tried to to move around sentences and maybe try to then get rid of some that don’t matter anymore?
I have this problem – I am currently over by 1046 words. But, through this process I have finally found a solution. Plan my paragraphs in advance making sure I estimate how much I should write for each paragraph; by using this as a mental guide as I write, I will know when to stop before I get the end and it’s all a bit too late.
I am 150 words over my 1000 word essay. I got into a essay writing mood and was going for 2 hr before i looked at my word count. All of my words are important but I have to get rid of some.
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7 Word Count Tips for Clear, Powerful Academic Writing
Maximum word limits are a pain in the butt. It’s kinda soul destroying to have to cut all the beautiful words you’ve just spent hours writing.
But they are there for a reason.
Word limits force you to write concisely so you can answer the question well without wasting words. I often felt like there was no way I could cut enough from my word count but, using my techniques below, I always managed to and the end result was a clearer, more powerful piece of writing.
In this blog post you’ll discover:
- Why you should cut the fluff from your writing
- Why you should try to reduce your word count
- 7 simple techniques to improve your writing today
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Your goal isn’t to write a literary masterpiece. You won’t get higher marks for knocking your tutor’s socks off with your elegant prose.
Instead – you need to get your ideas down on paper in the least amount of words possible. While your writing may seem less pleasant to read, your tutor will appreciate de-bloated writing…and you should gain higher marks.
Benefits of reducing your word count and improving the clarity of your writing:
- Your ability to control your language will give the reader the impression you are intelligent and educated
- Clear writing will help the reader understand your ideas and argument
- Cutting the fluff will allow you to include more valuable points so you can score the highest mark possible
If you manage to cut 100 words from an essay by using these tips, that’s 100 extra words to answer the question. Those 100 spare words could be used to craft seven or eight kick ass sentences that could gain you the marks needed to push you to the next grade.
7 Simple Ways to Reduce Your Word Count
1. get rid of redundant modifiers.
The use of redundant modifiers has crept into our everyday language so they’re hard to spot. Marketing messages often include redundant modifiers to attempt to add effect, such as, ‘ very unique ’. If something is ‘ unique ’ it is one of a kind. Adding ‘ very ’ does nothing to the meaning, adds an extra word and just sounds silly if you think about it. The same applies to the examples, ‘ added bonus ’ or ‘ absolutely certain ’.
Look through your writing to see if you’ve included any redundant modifiers. After awhile you’ll get in the habit of not using them.
Here's some examples you can edit to reduce your word count
Absolutely certain > certain
Added bonus > bonus
Basic essentials > essentials
Complete monopoly of the market > monopoly of the market
Crystal clear > clear
End result > result
Exact same > exact/same
Final outcome > outcome
Immediate vicinity > vicinity
Major breakthrough > breakthrough
Make plans in advance > make plans
New initiative > initiative
Natural instinct > instinct
Over exaggerate > exaggerate
Past experience > experience
Past memories > memories
Personal opinion > opinion
Postpone until later > postpone
Revert back > revert
Top priority > priority
True fact > fact
Very unique > unique
Weather conditions > weather
Written down > written
2. De-bloat your inflated phrases
Similarly, there are probably instances where you’re using two, three or four words where one would do. These can take a few edits to pick up but once removed your word count and clarity are improved pretty quickly.
Are indications of > indicates
At all times > always
At the present time > at present/currently/now
Collaborate/join together > collaborate/join
Completely ruined > devastated
Concerning the matter of > about
Despite the fact that > although
Due to the fact that > because
During the course of > during
For the purpose of > for
Has a tendency to > tends
Has knowledge of > knows
Has the ability to > can
In a situation in which > when
In order to > to/so that
In the event that > if
It is necessary that > must/should
On the other hand > conversely
On two separate occasions > twice
The majority of > most
There is a chance that > may/might/could
Until such time as > until
What the organisation aims to do is > the organisation aims to
Whether or not > whether
Will provide a summary > will summarise
With regards to > about
3. Redundant categories
Some people have a tendency to state an attribute or characteristic and then, perhaps in an effort to be more accurate, state its category too. For example, ‘ blue in colour ’ should just be ‘ blue ’. ‘ Small in size ’ should just be ‘ small ’. Remove these in your writing and sound smarter.
Attractive in appearance > attractive
Blue in colour > blue
Heavy in weight > heavy
Honest in character > honest
In a confused state > confused
Of a strange type > strange
Of cheap quality > cheap
Period in time > period
Small in size > small
Unusual in nature > unusual
4. Remove ‘that’
Some words take up precious word count but add nothing. The most common is ‘ that ’ which is fairly harmless but, over the course of an entire essay, could increase the word count. You won’t always be able to remove ‘ that ’ and maintain clarity, but search your document and see if removing them alters the meaning of the sentence.
Ensure that you make relevant use of both articles
This is the book that she wrote
The report that was approved by the board
I want to buy that car
5. Delete adverbs
Adverbs can weaken academic writing by detracting from what is being said. Using adverbs frequently will bloat your writing and can disrupt a reader’s flow. Don’t add a descriptive word to a verb, instead just use a descriptive verb. For example, ‘ dropped rapidly ’ can become ‘ plummeted ’.
Search your text for the word ‘ very ’ or adverbs ending in ‘ ly’ and see if they can be replaced while maintaining clarity.
Eat noisily > gulp
Drop rapidly > plummet
Look angrily > scowl
Run quickly > sprint
Say quietly > whisper
Very big > enormous
Very tired > exhausted
6. Eliminate redundant pairings
The English language is so rich we often have too many words to choose from . Rather than choosing one and sticking to it we tend to pile them on top of each other. A simple idea can quickly become a bloated sentence filled with pointless words.
Look out for some of the examples below and shorten them to reduce the word count but maintain clarity
(Also do this where you’ve created your own list of descriptive or explanatory words.)
First and foremost
Hope and trust
Each and every
So on and do forth
Over and done with
One and only
Few and far between
Peace and quiet
Hope and desire
Tidy and presentable
7. Remove ‘helping words’
This technique can take a little practice to implement but it can reduce your word count quickly. Sentences including words in the form of ‘ be ’ or ‘ have ’ can often be edited and rearranged to reduce word count and add clarity. Check your writing for these sentences.
First, one has to analyse the situation > first, analyse the situation
The report was prepared by Psychology students > Psychology students prepared the report
This report has been prepared to analyse… > this report analyses/aims to analyse…
His duties were classified in the report > the report classified his duties.
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How to Shorten a College Essay to Meet the Word Limit
The college application essay is one of the most important components of applying to college. Application essays require a lot of time and effort, so you want to make sure you don’t make easy-to-overlook mistakes such as going over your college application word count.
Unfortunately, many students leave their admissions essay as the last step of their application process after studying for the SAT and learning how to request letters of recommendation. High school students don’t have the time, energy, experience, or organizational skills to prioritize their essay word count and word limits when writing their draft and receiving personal statement editing , recommendation letter editing , or cover letter editing , depending on your admissions documents.
The good news is that being over the word limit in your admissions essay is not the end of the world. You’ve managed to output a lot of writing for your college essay. That’s a good starting point for revisions. All quality and successful admissions essays go through the revision process, and a big part of the revision process includes reducing word count.
This article will explore the following topics:
How flexible is the college essay word limit?
- Can you go over/under the college essay word count?
- Why staying under application essay word limits is so hard
- How to shorten the length of your admissions essay
- Get help to cut down your college essay word count
- FAQ about how to shorten your essay length: Advice from editing experts
Your essay must stay within the required word limit whether you’re applying directly to your university or through the Common Application, which has become synonymous with the college application process.
The Common App specifies the word limit required for each essay. Even though this has changed over the years– from 650 to 500 words in the past –the current Common App essay word count is somewhere between 250 to 650 words.
Can you go over the essay word limit?
You must be careful about staying within the word limit for each application. Look at the essay prompts closely. Unless specified, never go over the word limit for a college application essay .
It might be impossible to go over the essay word limit
Some universities may allow you to mail in a copy of your admissions essay, but most will use online applications with text fields that may cut off your essay if it goes over the maximum word count.
Admissions officers may just stop reading or toss out your essay
Admissions officers are busier than Santa’s elves during the winter holiday season. They read dozens if not hundreds of essays per day, and most of those will be rejected. If you fail your application, make sure it’s due to the content or something else; failing due to a simple word limit mistake would be a waste!
Following directions is a key component of being a student
If you told someone to do something and you were in the position to enforce it, would you accept the wrong result if 100 other people were waiting and did it right? Of course not. Therefore, the least you can do is to follow any instructions regarding college essay word limits to show admissions officers you will be a competent student at their school.
Can you go under the essay word limit?
While going over the word limit is a clear and decisive issue, it’s a bit trickier to determine how short your college application essay should be.
Pay attention to minimum word limits and word ranges
Some essay prompts will have a suggested minimum– for example, 500 to 650 words. As mentioned above, online text input fields may cut you off at the maximum word count. Some may even have some red text reminding you to input at least 500 words. But you should always double-check these word count guidelines.
The essay is your opportunity to shine
Why would you be so lazy as to only write the minimum amount for your personal statement? This is a great opportunity for you to stand above and apart from other applicants, and choosing your words wisely while presenting your story fully is important.
Add some concrete examples
Examples of events and actions can help you meet the correct word count range. This also reduces redundancy in your writing while reinforcing and supporting your main points. College admissions officers love to hear about your unique experiences.
Why do students find essay word limits difficult?
Why staying under essay word limits is so hard
We now know several reasons why keeping your college essay length in the correct word range so you don’t violate any word limit is important. But why is staying under essay word limits so hard?
The essay has no structure or organization
The most effective things are stated simply. And the most effective college admissions essays organize, structure, and communicate efficiently. That doesn’t mean your personal statement will be short; it means that each point should be concise.
For example, split your writing into clear paragraphs. Organize your essay into separate sections for your academic, leadership, volunteer, and personal experiences. Be sure to add a section on extracurricular activities. Make your structure clear to the reader so that word count will only be a minor consideration.
The essay does not focus on the essay prompt
If you are having difficulty cutting your word count, look for sentences or even entire paragraphs that are not relevant to the essay prompt. Adding unnecessary information is an easy trap to fall into. Your anecdotes or stories might be interesting and funny, but do they help illustrate why you want to attend UC or Stanford?
The essay lacks proper vocabulary and verb usage
This tip is more subtle but can really help you reduce essay length and word count. When writing, always use the most appropriate verb, preferably one verb only. It will drastically reduce your word count overall. This is because when you choose the wrong verb, you often must add more words to clarify.
Average/Wordy: “I hit the ball so hard it went over the fence.”
Exceptional/Concise: “I smashed the ball over the fence.”
The verb “hit” is a solely descriptive action verb. It provides no context about the degree to which you hit the ball, which is why “so hard” or other adverbs are naturally added to regular verbs to provide extra information. Changing the verb completely to something more engaging like “smashed” provides all the context you need. And you just saved 4 out of 11 words!
The essay uses a traditional introduction/conclusion structure
Many students applying to college fall into the trap of trying to fit their essay into a traditional structure consisting of an introduction, body, and conclusion.
With only 650 words, you can recover your word count by skipping the formal rigid essay structure. Instead, dive right into your essay. Your content and experiences are the most important components of your application essay, and you need every word.
Tips to reduce the length of your application essay
Here are some simple tips to cut down the length of your essay. Start with some broad admissions essay tips first and move on to the easier grammar and proofreading-related steps below.
Remove adverbs
Here’s how to find if your admissions essay has a lot of adverbs: Look for “ly” words around your verbs. Often, these types of adverbs are just filler words and a reflection of spoken conversational English rather than accomplishing anything meaningful. Go through your essay and decide if each adverb is truly necessary.
Unnecessary adverbs: “ate quickly”, “ran quickly”
Stronger verbs: “devoured”, “rushed”
Here is a list of common adverbs you can remove to reduce your essay’s word count:
Remove filler words
Filler words are another crutch or may just be used out of habit. Go through your essay right now with “ctrl + f” or “cmd + f” for Mac users and delete every instance of actually and very. We promise they add nothing important to your writing.
Example
Filler words: “I found myself actually surprised about how much I learned”
No filler words: “I was surprised at how much I learned”
The word “actually” is pretty much useless. You must clearly state that you were surprised. Further, “finding yourself” is a conversational filler that comes off as unprofessional.
Avoid using too many prepositional phrases
Prepositions are common linking words such as of , to , for , by , from , in , and on . These are highly dependent on the context of your personal statement, especially when you reference narrative elements in your past. Go through your essay carefully and make changes to reword your sentences and cut down your essay word count.
Too many prepositional phrases: “I struggled to work in a team in order to get a good grade in the group project”
Fewer prepositional phrases: “I struggled with the team aspect of the group project”
There’s no need to verbalize that you worked in a team or to mention the grad aspect. Furthermore, these prepositional phrases add extra length to your sentences, which will not help you meet the essay word count.
Be clear and concise. Cut down your word count.
Be direct and decisive in your writing
Students are often told to avoid overgeneralizing groups of people or ideas but that they should also be precise in their English writing. This can lead to the author failing to commit to a concept and coming off as unsure or weak.
An overreliance on modifier words such as adjectives and adverbs is often the culprit.
Too many modifiers: “Although my high school grades were sometimes slightly less than average, I was able to outperform many of my classmates, who often struggled to improve.”
Stronger verbs and adjectives: “Although my high school grades were inconsistent, I later outperformed my classmates, who struggled to improve.”
You can see how the improved version appears more matter-of-fact, consistent, and even confident despite the admission of lower grades.
Don’t be a narrator
Do not waste time restating the common app essay prompt or telling the reader what you will discuss next. This would be fine for an informative article (like the one you’re reading now), but not for an application essay. Eliminating these structural road markers will greatly cut down your word count.
Too much narration: “I will start by discussing my leadership experiences…” or “The next important part of my academic background was my….”
Less narration: “I gained leadership experience when…” or “One of my academic achievements was…”
Consider college essay editors for extra help
Get help from a professional college essay editor
The college admissions and application essay landscape is very competitive, and this has led students to seek an edge. One reason why application essay editing services are so popular is due to their speed and quality. They free up students to prepare more college applications and focus on the content of their personal statements instead of drilling down things like grammar and essay word limits.
One of the best things applicants can do is write as many college admissions essays as possible without worrying at all about grammar or word count. Organize your essays by the essay prompt category (e.g. “Why X university?” or “Tell us about an obstacle you overcame”).
Then, send ONE type of each essay to a reputable proofreading company that offers college essay editing services . When you get your changes back, apply them to all essays of that category. This minimizes the cost but gets you the most benefits.
FAQ: How to shorten your admissions essay
Advice from our editing experts , can a college essay be longer than 650 words.
- The standard word count for the Common app essay is 650 words. Rule 1) Follow any explicit word limit guidelines. Rule 2) Always go under the limit as opposed to over the word limit.
Can you use contractions and abbreviations in college essays?
- Yes. For college application essays, use contractions and abbreviations.
Do citations count towards the college essay word limit?
- Every word in the text field or on your page counts towards the essay word limit. Avoid using citations in a college essay as it is not an academic paper.
Does the title count towards the college essay word limit?
- Do not restate the essay prompt or add a title to your essay. If you are submitting a separate MS Word document, add the title or essay prompt (along with your name) as the .doc name.
How many pages is 650 words?
- A 650-word college application essay will be under 1 page.
How do you shorten long sentences?
- Start by 1) eliminating helper verbs and adverbs, 2) removing redundancy, 3) remove filler words such as “very” and “actually,” and 4) make sure every sentence supports the overall point of the paragraph.
How many paragraphs is a 650-word essay?
- A 500-word essay is 3 to 4 paragraphs. A 650-word essay is 4-5 paragraphs. Your essay should be less than 1 page single or double-spaced.
Hot Pepper Communications
5 tricks to reduce word count in your ridiculously long essay
I remember my communications teacher in college once had us write a 500-word assignment. I don’t remember the topic, but I remember how difficult it was to limit it to just 500 words.
After my classmates and I had each finished the assignment, she gave us our next one: cut the writing in half.
That’s right, I had to take a document I thought was already too short and find a way to make it shorter. It was a frustrating experience, but one I am now grateful for. The lessons I learned in that assignment follow me today.
Here are 5 tricks I’ve discovered since then that help me reduce my word count when writing.
1. Eliminate redundant wording
Once you’re on a roll, it can be easy for extra words to sneak into your writing . Sometimes another word in the sentence already says the same thing. Other times, the structure of the sentence already implies the redundant word; this is especially true when writing in the present tense.
Currently, we live downtown. | We live downtown. |
Absolutely necessary | Necessary |
Every single one of them | Each of them |
Period of time | Period |
2. Remove prepositions
Especially “of”. We love to make things sound smarter by including too many prepositions. Cut back the unnecessary ones.
The location of the business is next to the street with a lot of traffic. | The business is next to the busy street. |
The shirt of the boy was worn with pride. | The boy proudly wore his shirt. |
A number of oranges | Several oranges |
He handed the cheque to me. | He handed me the cheque. |
3. Replace phrases with single words
Sometimes what we think we need several words for can actually be described in a single word.
Find out | Discover |
Come up with | Provide |
Put up with | Endure |
Look in on | Visit |
4. Switch passive voice for active voice
I see the use of passive voice so frequently, especially in academia. It’s a cop out and discourages the writer from taking responsibility for what’s happening in the writing. It has its place occasionally, but most of the time, the active voice does just fine.
The research will be finalized and presented. | I will finalize and present the research. |
The apple was eaten by the girl. | The girl ate the apple. |
Winter was hated by everyone known by me. | Everyone I know hated winter. |
The lawn used to be mowed by my neighbour. | My neighbour used to mow my lawn. |
5. Avoid using “very” or “really”
We often use these words for emphasis, but sometimes single words exist that mean the same thing .
Very hungry | Famished |
Really tall | Towering |
Very tired | Exhausted |
Really happy | Elated |
Show no mercy when you use these tips to reduce your word count. Soon, you’ll be writing text that’s faster and easier to read.
What tricks do you use to reduce your word count?
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By Kim Siever
I am a copywriter and copyeditor. I blog on writing and social media tips mostly, but I sometimes throw in my thoughts about running a small business. Follow me on Twitter at @hotpepper .
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10 Tips to Trim Your College Essay
Updated: Sep 25, 2021
Is your college essay over the word count? Do you need space to add just a couple more key sentences? Use these tips to reduce words and strengthen your writing.
1. Eliminate adverbs
Look at your use of the word “very” and “ly” words, such as really , extremely , truly , completely , and absolutely .
Do they enhance your story?
Or are they redundant?
Example...(redundant)
He screamed loudly becomes He screamed.
Is there a better way to write it? Can you replace the “-ly” with a stronger adjective or verb?
He ran quickly becomes He raced.
She ran quickly becomes She sprinted.
When appropriate, revise or delete adverbs.
You do not need to remove every adverb, but limiting them (approximately one to every 300 words) will strengthen your writing.
2. Use adjectives sparingly
Writers often use adjectives to beef up their nouns. Instead, use stronger nouns.
A difficult problem becomes a quandary.
A huge hill becomes a mountain.
3. Omit unnecessary transition words
Look for a single word or short phrase followed by a comma.
These include because of this, in fact, first, last, hopefully, to be frank, quite frankly and in conclusion .
Highlight the words or phrases, then read the sentences without them. Does the sentence still make sense?
Ultimately, I realized failure teaches lessons for future success.
I realized failure teaches lessons for future success.
Delete the adverbs that do not add to the meaning.
4. Replace helping (auxiliary) verbs and use a stronger verb
He is going to be attending becomes He will attend.
I was thinking becomes I thought.
I am an avid reader becomes I read avidly.
5. Turn some nouns into verbs
I concluded is better than I came to the conclusion.
This painting portrays life and beauty is better than This painting is a portrayal of life and beauty.
6. Turn a passive sentence into an active sentence
Revise It was impressed upon me from an early age... to
I learned at an early age...
The sentence becomes shorter and more “action-oriented” and puts the focus on "you" the writer.
Pro tip: Here's a quick video where my colleague, Eveyln, teaches students how to turn a passive sentence into "I" focused action sentence.
7. Use contractions
I could not believe... becomes I couldn't believe...
Contractions sound friendlier, more personal, and more genuine. And they save word space.
8. Eliminate most of your thats.
Read the sentence without them. Remove them if they do not add to the sentence.
I want to read that book. [keep - it adds]
The book that I read was long. [delete - does not add]
The book I read was long.
9. Use possessive nouns
Read through your essay and look for "of the" phrasing when describing a noun.
Use the noun's possessive form to eliminate words.
The intricacy of the design amazed me.
The design's intricacy amazed me.
10. Use the plural when possible
Articles like "the" and "a" can be cut by converting the noun from the singular to plural.
Whenever I eat a tamale, I'm transported back in time.
Whenever I eat tamales I'm transported back in time.
It may seem like these revision strategies save only a couple of words per edit, but you will find they add up quickly. Use these ten tips to make your essay more compact and readable.
Bonus tip to gauge your essay's readability
Get a “read” on your writing’s readability with the Hemmingway App .
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How to Shorten an Essay: 4 Techniques to Reduce Word Count
If you need to shorten your essay by 100-500 words, or even more, you can use one or more of four techniques. You can clean up your sentences, remove repetition, summarize your examples, and/or cut out an entire section.
One of my subscribers recently asked me, “ How do I compress an essay of 700-1000 words, or even more, to just 300 words? ”
In this tutorial I will show you four easy ways to shorten your essay by as much or as little as you wish. I am giving them to you in the order you should try them out.
Here are four techniques to shorten your essay:
Technique #1: Sentence Cleanup
When I taught essay writing in college, I noticed that students wrote sentences that were just too wordy.
They used 20 words where 10 would have probably done the trick. If you examine your sentences, you’ll often find that you can say the same thing in much fewer words.
“In my opinion, there are many people who want to lose weight.”
This sentence contains 12 words.
Here’s how we can shorten it by performing a Sentence Cleanup.
First, you never have to say, “ In my opinion, ” because if it were not your opinion, you wouldn’t be stating it. Okay? So, let’s cross out “ in my opinion. ”
“ In my opinion, there are many people who want to lose weight.”
We just cut out three words.
Next, the phrase “ there are ” is usually unnecessary, and if you take it out, your sentence will become more elegant. So, let’s do it. Let’s just cross it out.
“ There are many people who want to lose weight.”
We also have to cross out the extra word “ who ” because it is only needed if you use “ there are. ”
We just got rid of three more words.
And so our sentence becomes:
“Many people want to lose weight.”
How many words is that? That is now a six word sentence. Guess what – we just cut this sentence in half.
Do this enough times in your essay, and it will get a lot shorter.
“How do I cut out 200 words from my essay to make it shorter?”
This sentence contains 14 words. Let’s perform a Sentence Cleanup.
Notice that it is pretty obvious that to cut out 200 words from an essay will make it shorter. Therefore, stating that you want to do it “ to make it shorter ” is unnecessary.
If we get rid of that phrase, we’ll cut out 4 words from this sentence and make it a lot more elegant.
“How do I cut out 200 words from my essay to make it shorter ?”
Technique #2: Removing Repetition
Repetition can be found on all levels – in a sentence, in a paragraph, or a section. When you reduce or eliminate repetition in your essay, you are making it less redundant. “Redundant” just means repetitive and therefore useless.
In the last example we just did, we eliminated a redundancy from a sentence. And that’s part of a Sentence Cleanup. But you can also find and eliminate entire redundant sentences.
Look for repetitive phrases, sentences, and even passages in your content and remove them.
Students often repeat things over and over, using different words, thinking that they’re writing great content. Those are your opportunities to significantly shorten your essay while improving it at the same time.
Here’s an example from a fictitious student essay. Let’s say the student writes about his trip to Paris and states:
“ I found that Parisians are very nice if you talk to them in French. ”
And then, in the same or even a different paragraph or section, the following sentence would appear:
“Parisians can be very nice people, but they really prefer that you speak French with them.”
Well, the two sentences say the same thing, just using different words.
So, what do you do?
Pick the longer sentence and just delete it.
Sometimes you will find a whole paragraph in your essay that is repetitive and can be removed without the essay losing any meaning. If you find such a paragraph, just delete it.
Technique #3: Zooming Out
Make sure that you go through your essay using the first two techniques before you employ this and the next one.
The only case where you would do Zooming Out first would be if you had to shorten your essay drastically – by 30% or more.
If you’ve cleaned up all your sentences and removed all repetitive content, and you still need to lose hundreds of words, the Zooming Out technique will really help.
Here’s how it works.
You may have heard that in essay writing, you are supposed to proceed from general to specific. Whether you stick to this rule really well in your essay or not, I want you to notice something.
In your essay, you make statements that are:
- very general
- less general
- somewhat specific
- very specific
The most general statement in your essay is the thesis because it summarizes the entire essay. And the most specific parts of your essay are examples .
So, in order to shorten your essay, you can summarize your examples. I call this Zooming Out because you are taking something that was very specific (zoomed in) and making it more general (zoomed out).
Let’s say you’re writing about the harms of second-hand smoking. And in one of the sections you provide an example of your friend or someone in the news who became seriously ill because she lived with a smoker for a long time:
“My friend Isabelle was married to a chain smoker. Her husband refused not only to give up his habit but even to reduce it. As years went by, Isabelle began to notice some respiratory symptoms. At first, she developed a light but persistent cough. Then, she started to feel out of breath more and more often. When she finally went to a pulmonologist, a test revealed that she had COPD, a serious lung disease.”
This example is 74 words long. And this is your opportunity to shorten your essay dramatically.
You can simply contract this example into one short sentence and write something like this:
“A friend of mine developed lung disease after having lived with a chain smoker for twelve years.”
Now, this sentence contains only 17 words. We just cut out 57 words just by Zooming Out on one example.
We are Zooming Out because we are no longer exploring this example in detail. We simply provide a fact without giving a lot of specific information.
So, look for these detailed examples in your essay and just summarize each of them into one short sentence.
Technique #4: Cutting out a Section
This technique works very well to cut out a big chunk of your essay in one fell swoop.
Let’s say that you wrote an essay in which you have four supporting points to prove your main point, your thesis.
If this is a 2,000-word essay, then each section is approximately 500 words long. But do you really need four reasons/sections to support your point?
Is it possible that if you provide only three supporting points, your essay will still work very well?
For example, if you argue that apples are a great food, you could have four supporting points, claiming that apples are:
But what if you simply took out one of these points? Let’s say that you eliminate the section about the portability of apples.
Will your essay still work? Sure it will. It will work just fine with the three remaining supporting points. And you just cut out 500 words (in a 2,000-word essay).
After you have cut out a section, make sure to go back to your thesis statement and edit it to reflect the change.
I’ll leave you with one final tip. When trying to choose which sentence, paragraph, or section to cut out from your essay, go for the content that you know is not the best.
For example, you may have a section in your essay where you quote too much. Or, perhaps you were not very careful in paraphrasing, and your passage sounds too much like the original source. These would be great bits of content to get rid of.
I hope this was helpful. Now go ahead and shorten your essay to your heart’s desire!
How to Write a 300 Word Essay – Simple Tutorial
How to expand an essay – 4 tips to increase the word count, 10 solid essay writing tips to help you improve quickly, essay writing for beginners: 6-step guide with examples, 6 simple ways to improve sentence structure in your essays.
Tutor Phil is an e-learning professional who helps adult learners finish their degrees by teaching them academic writing skills.
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Essay Trimmer: Reduce the Word Count for Free
Reducing the number of words is not easy, especially in the content that you have created yourself. Use the free essay trimmer to cut down any text.
Looking for an essay trimmer?
Take the 3 steps to remove clutter from your paper:
The word limit for each academic paper is set for a reason. It helps us focus research on a particular number of issues, plan writing, and communicate ideas clearly and concisely.
But what to do if you have reached the limit and still have ideas to write down? Use our Word Count Trimmer! Read the article below to discover its main advantages and ways of using it in your favor!
🤔 What Is a Word Count Trimmer?
- ️⚙️ How to Use the Trimmer?
✂️ Words to Cut out of Essays
🔻 how to reduce word count.
- 😀 Essay Trimmer: Benefits
❓ Sentence Trimmer: FAQ
🔗 references.
Essay Trimmer is an online tool that can help you reduce the length of any text to a specified number of sentences. It picks the most important sentences, thus decreasing the word count without changing the core message of the piece.
This online word cutter can be especially beneficial for those working with a lot of written content. As a bonus, you can also use the app to summarize books, novels, and articles on any topic.
⚙️ How to Use the Paragraph Trimmer?
Using Word Count Trimmer does not require much effort! Just follow 4 steps below and get the result within a second:
- Paste the text. The first step is to paste the text you have chosen into the appropriate field of the Essay Word Cutter. Ensure that your piece of writing does not exceed 20k characters.
- Adjust the settings. You can choose the length of shortened version and whether you want to receive keywords from the text.
- Click the button. Then, give our summarizing bot a second to produce the outcome.
- Get the shortened version. You can copy the final result in just one click!
When reducing the word count, you should primarily target phrases that do not add any value to your text. Below are some types of words you can easily cut out from your essay.
Adjectives are often used instead of evidence. Consider replacing them with data and statistics or using to convey the atmosphere. | The tsunami → The tsunami that caused 15,700 deaths | |
Too many adverbs can give the sense that the writer is subjective. Moreover, many adverbs are useless (e.g., certainly, absolutely, basically, etc.). | Turmeric can be beneficial in the treatment of various diseases. | |
Sometimes, you can easily delete the “the” from your sentence without losing the sense. | The clarity of your essay depends on core ideas and arguments you provide. | |
The word “that” is frequently overused in writing and can be easily cut out. | The government should ensure all citizens have health coverage. | |
Conjunctions often connect 2 independent statements that can be as 2 separate sentences. | Patients given medicine X had no symptoms after 4 days, patients given drug Y had no symptoms after 6 days. | |
Phrases like “there are,” “it is,” and “the fact that” can be removed to make your text shorter. | the human brain is not fully developed until age 25. | |
Choose shorter versions of words and phrases to make your story clear and powerful. | → Although |
Apart from removing the unnecessary words listed above, you can use several more effective ways to cut down the number of words in your essay. Read on to gain some new insights!
Use the Shortest Forms of Words & Phrases
If there is a choice between a long phrase or word and a short one — choose the latter! This recommendation is especially critical if you must keep your writing within a specific character count instead of a word count. For example, instead of “give consideration to,” you can use “consider” or “think about.”
Don’t Repeat Yourself
Unfortunately, repetition is a widespread mistake among college students or even experienced writers. You can convey the same thought a couple of times using different words, which can irritate your readers or make them bored. Therefore, express each idea in your essay clearly and briefly.
Choose Active Voice
The active voice comprises fewer words than the passive one. As a result, using active voice makes your writing more straightforward and more appealing to readers, allowing you to tell a more impactful story. Check out the example below.
New data about climate change was collected by researchers. | 9 words, 51 characters | |
Researchers collected new data about climate change. | 7 words, 46 characters |
Begin Sentences with the Subject
If you begin sentences with the subject , your writing will be easier to comprehend because it will be evident who or what the statement is about. Moreover, you’ll have to remove all unnecessary introductory phrases before the subject, thus reducing your word count. Just consider the most crucial element in the statement and build a sentence around it.
Here’s an example:
- ❌ It was found that after an earthquake, the largest building in the town survived.
- ✅ The largest building in the town survived an earthquake.
Focus on the Message
When your writing lacks focus and you don’t clearly understand what you want to say, it is easy to write too much. You will jump from one idea to another, and your paper will become messy. To avoid it, focus on your thesis statement and logically arrange your main arguments to support it. A carefully structured outline can help you with that.
😃 Essay Trimmer: Benefits
Don’t miss a chance to try our Essay Trimmer! It has so much to offer to its users:
You can choose the number of sentences you want in your summary and get a shortened version of your text in a few seconds. | |
Out Paragraph Trimmer can shorten articles and other course readings if you do not have enough time to read their full versions. | |
Our Unnecessary Word Remover is available online and 100% free of charge! | |
Our word count reducer is easy to use and can contain 15k characters! Though, we recommend summarizing smaller chunks of text for a better result. | |
Be sure that the main ideas of your paper will be saved with our Sentence Trimmer! |
❓ Why Is Word Count Important?
Having a specific word count puts you in control. It makes writing more manageable because it lets you plan how much research you should do and how to structure your paper. Word limit also allows you to allocate the appropriate amount of time to writing and focus on the core message you want to highlight in your text.
❓ How Many Words Should an Essay Be?
The essay’s length depends on your assignment type, professor’s instructions, and education level. Here are sample word counts for common assignments:
- High school essay – 300-1000 words;
- College applications – 200-700 words;
- Graduate school applications – 500-1000 words;
- Graduate-level papers – 2000-6000 words.
❓ How to Cut Down Words in an Essay?
Use the tips below to cut down words in your essay or paper and strengthen your writing:
- Use active voice instead of passive.
- Utilize the plural when possible.
- Remove redundant transition words.
- Turn some nouns into verbs.
- Use possessive nouns.
❓ How to Check Word Count on Google Docs?
Take these 4 steps to check the word count in Google Docs:
- Open the Google Doc and paste your text.
- Click “Tools” in the header menu.
- Choose “Word Count” from the drop-down menu.
- Check the word count in a pop-up window.
Updated: Sep 13th, 2024
- 10 Tips for Cutting Your Word Count | The University of Adelaide
- Eliminating Words | Purdue Online Writing Lab
- Writing Concisely | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
- Strategies for Reducing Word Count | University of Georgia
- Cutting Out Lard | University of Massachusetts Amherst
Automatic Word Count Reducer
Summarize any writing piece with this word count reducer in 3 steps:
- Add the passage you want to cut.
- Choose the desired number of sentences to keep in the passage.
- Click "Reduce" and enjoy the result.
Number of sentences in results:
Original ratio
100 % in your summary
Charachters
Why may you need to use an automatic online word count shortener?
The need to preserve a specific word count is called the essay's " scope " – an extent of analysis a student should not exceed in a particular assignment. In these cases, a paraphrasing generator that can remove redundant words and help you keep within the assigned word count.
- 🔢 What Is Essay Word Count?
✍️ Word Count for Various Essays
- ✂️ Tips to Shorten an Essay
🔗 References
🔢 what is essay word count & why does it matter.
As you will quickly notice at school, college, or university, every assignment contains specific instructions that cover the word count your home task should include.
Why are they important?
This is done primarily to minimize your effort and help you plan the working schedule. For instance, you will understand that you need to reserve 2 days for a 3,000 -word essay and can manage a 500 -word essay in 2 or 3 hours.
Besides, the word count sets the scope for your research; you will surely need to check fewer literary sources for a 500-word essay and visit a library a couple of times to write a large-scale 5,000-word study.
In other words, the word count of your essay task sets the limits for your study effort and gives you hints about the depth of research you need to conduct to meet the professor's requirements.
A practical guide may also help you determine the time and scope of various academic assignments . Here is a comparative table with word counts for assignments at different study levels.
Essay type | Word count | What's expected from you? |
---|---|---|
300-1,000 words | The majority of school tasks for essay writing refer to construction. Thus, you're expected to produce an essay for 2-3 pages on average, which falls within this word count range. | |
1,500-5,000 words | You may receive different essay tasks depending on the department where you study. But in most cases, they start at 5 pages in length and can reach up to 20 pages in length to let you examine a subject in greater depth. | |
2,500-6,000 words | These essays are more like , as they require extensive research and the use of scholarly evidence to structure your argument. | |
200-600 words | Admission essays are usually short and have very strict word count requirements. They are meant to introduce yourself to the committee and prove that you're worth a college or university spot. |
✂️ Tips to Reduce Word Count in an Essay
If you're not ready to use a word count reducer and want to do everything manually, here are a couple of workable techniques for word count optimization.
- Avoid redundant beginnings . It's good practice to start a sentence with a subject. This way, you will avoid extensive "running starts," such as "as a matter of fact," "summing the presented evidence," etc. Your sentences will be simpler to read and free from redundant phrasing.
- Use active voice . Passive-voice phrases always add a couple of redundant words to a sentence. If you don't really need to disguise the doer of the action, you should use active voice only. You'll see how neat and clean your text will sound.
- Remove adjectives and adverbs . Adjectives and adverbs are frequently used in literary language, as they add vivid details and shades of meaning to notional words. However, they often create clutter in academic writing and are fully avoidable in most cases. So, you should consider removing most of them to make the text more readable and shorter.
- Don't exceed 25 words in a sentence . Academic writers are often tempted to sound more scholarly with long, overloaded sentences, including many compounds. In reality, such writing efforts rarely pay off, as they confuse the readers and disguise the core message the writer wanted to deliver. Thus, it's better to divide long sentences into several parts. Using this trick, you can avoid redundant transitions and simplify the content flow.
- One idea at a time . A logical progression of an academic text is a vital criterion of readability. Thus, you should explain relationships between variables or focus on one supporting argument at a time, avoiding a discussion of several factors in one go. This technique will improve your text's comprehension score and free readers from overly complex argumentation, causing a cognitive overload.
In all other cases – a lack of time, no desire to go through the entire text again – welcome to our word reduction tool that will make your editing job a breeze. Try our title maker and paraphraser to write and polish your essay quickly.
❓ Word Count Reducer FAQ
❓ how to count words in an essay.
It's pretty easy to control your word count in an essay. You should activate this function in your Word file, and a small tab at the bottom of your page will update you about the document's current word count as you type the essay's content. You can also click on "Statistics" in the Word menu to learn additional statistics about your text, such as the number of characters with and without spaces and the number of lines, sentences, and paragraphs you currently have.
❓ What is the word count for a college essay?
Word count is a specific number of words (or a range of words) that your professor assigns for writing. For instance, your university tutor may require students to write from 1,000 to 1,500 words in one essay. Thus, you can't compose fewer than 1,000 words (the paper should be at least 1,001 words), and you shouldn't write more than 1,500 words. A standard threshold for exceeding the assigned word count is 10% (so it's okay to submit a 1,650-word essay).
❓ How to reduce word count in an essay?
There are many techniques for word count reduction, such as cutting the articles, conjunctions, transition phrases, and running starts from the text. You may also consider changing passive-voice phrases to active voice or replacing some complex, sophisticated phrases with simpler words.
❓ What does a summarizer do?
A free text compressor available on our website can reduce the word count of your essay by removing redundant words that don't hold any vital meaning and can be removed without losing the text's quality. You can reduce the word count and combine several sentences into one automatically to achieve high-quality text reduction.
- How to reduce word count without reducing content
- How to Increase or Decrease Your Paper’s Word Count
- Summarizing - Academic Integrity at MIT
- Summarizing - University of Toronto Writing Advice
- Writer's Manual: Academic Summary - LibGuides UU
- Call to +1 844 889-9952
Word Count Reducer
Have you exceeded your assignment word limit and now wonder how to cut your essay length? Try our word count decreaser! It will shorten your paper while preserving its meaning.
Create a summary of any academic text with this summarizing software! It will generate a synopsis for you in 3 simple steps:
How often do you exceed the word count by more than 10%? How often do you lack the required amount of words? In many cases, writing a text of the exact size is difficult. However, teachers assess your ability to squeeze all required content into a particular volume, especially in admission essays.
Use our handy free online tool – a word decreaser – if you’re clueless about what to cut out from your writing.
- ✂️ How to Use the Word Decreaser?
✅ Word Cutter: the Benefits
- 🕰️ When to Use the Tool?
- ✍️ How to Cut Words?
- 🤩 Why Choose This Tool?
- 🔗 References
✂️ Word Count Decreaser Guidelines
When you realize that your text requires reduction, you may follow two paths – edit it on your own or take advantage of modern technology. Our smart word count decreaser will do the job for you! The entire process is automated and lets you submit an essay with an exact word count without losing the important content.
Here’s how you can use the decrease word count tool:
- Paste your text into the first window;
- Select the number of sentences you want the summary to have;
- Choose to see the keywords of the text;
- Press “Decrease” and review the result.
The best about our tool is that you won’t spend hours editing your writing masterpiece. You can quickly decrease word count online and experiment with several word combinations to find the best match.
Use the “Show keywords” option if necessary. | |
You don’t need to download unnecessary software. | |
No longer need to pay or use trial versions. | |
Enjoy the word cutter designed for educational purposes. |
🕰️ Word Cutter – When to Use It?
Let’s discuss the propriety of using the decrease word count generator and explain the cases when you’ll find it useful.
Exceeding the Word Count (Essay, Research Paper, Thesis)
Each academic assignment has a specific word count based on the contents and depth of the research.
- A standard essay usually ranges from 500 to 2000 words;
- A research paper is rarely smaller than 2,500-3,000 words;
- Theses and dissertations have more extended word counts, from 10,000 to 25,000.
So, if you’ve hopelessly run out of the required word count and still need to cover some vital sections, turn to our word count reducer. The tool will cut words from the essay or dissertation to let you meet the word limit. You can stipulate the number of sentences it should contain and highlight the keywords to preserve the core content.
Making a Book Review
A book review is a detailed yet concise analysis of the book’s contents, main plot twists, and characters. Students of humanities departments, especially Literature, often need to make book reviews and reports based on the studied material. But do you have time to read all the books and then write reviews? If not, our word count reducer can help you receive a short, manageable summary in a few seconds. Read it, get the book’s content, and write a review in one go without spending several days on full-size book reading.
Writing an Abstract
You may often need to complete an abstract for an essay, dissertation, or other academic manuscripts , which should not exceed 200-250 words. Producing such a concise summary is often challenging, as your work is large and contains many valuable facts you might want to cover. Our word reducer will do the job for you. Just instruct it on what to focus on, and the tool will generate a brief, informative abstract, keeping the data you need.
Paraphrasing
Students often have to read, process, and synthesize dozens of scholarly works when writing academic papers, like essays or coursework. The challenge here is to refer to sources in a non-plagiarized way , so you should dedicate enough time and effort to paraphrasing. Though our keyword reducer will not make the summarized content unique (paraphraser will), it will identify the key facts and points for further paraphrasing .
In this section, you’ll find the key advantages of this word reducer.
✍️ How to Reduce Word Count?
Many students ask, “how can I reduce my word count?” This task requires careful editing and content review so the process may take hours. We’ve compiled some handy tips to guide you in this process and hone your word-count-reduction skills.
- Focus on the gist. Try to take a step back and keep only your main idea in mind. You’ll quickly see how many redundant details can be dropped painlessly.
- Use verbs . Verb forms are active, dynamic, and expressive. Thus, if you have a phrase like, “she led the battle and won the award by competing with ten people,” think of replacing it with, “she beat ten competitors.”
- Oust adjectives and adverbs . Synonyms and meaning enhancers are acceptable in literary language, but they can easily be sacrificed when writing a scientific piece.
- Cut the intro and conclusion. These parts often contain irrelevant details and repeat the things you say in the body. So, keep these sections down to a minimum.
- Review preposition/conjunction use. Prepositions and conjunctions make your text coherent, but sometimes it’s better to split the sentence in two. Just like with the previous sentence in this paragraph – removing “but” will do a favor to it.
🤩 Why Choose This Reduce-Word-Count Generator?
As you can see, reducing the word count can be a tedious task. Our free online tool can do the job for you by speeding up the process of word cutting.
- You can shorten the text without losing its quality and key information.
- You stay in complete control of the word reduction process.
- You can compare the original text’s word/character/sentence count with in the output section.
- You can see keywords for a quick review of the core content.
- You are able to copy the result with one click.
What’s more, the tool comes with a detailed, user-friendly interface that will make your experience a breeze. It’s free to use, and you can enjoy it without limitations for any academic challenge.
Updated: Sep 28th, 2024
📎 References
- How to Reduce Your Essay Word Count – Word Counter Blog
- 10 Tips for Cutting Your Word Count – the University of Adelaide
- Paraphrasing – Purdue OWL® – Purdue University
- Writing an Abstract for Your Research Paper; The Writing Center; UW–Madison
- Research Paper Structure
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- Knowledge Base
- College essay
How Long Should a College Essay Be? | Word Count Tips
Published on September 29, 2021 by Kirsten Courault . Revised on June 1, 2023.
Most college application portals specify a word count range for your essay, and you should stay within 10% of the upper limit. If no word count is specified, we advise keeping your essay between 400 and 600 words.
You should aim to stay under the specified limit to show you can follow directions and write concisely. However, if you write too little, it may seem like you are unwilling or unable to write a thoughtful and developed essay.
Table of contents
Word count guidelines for different application types, how to shorten your essay, how to expand your essay, other interesting articles, frequently asked questions about college application essays.
Each university has a different suggested or required word count depending on which application portal it uses.
Some application portals will allow you to exceed the word count limit, but admissions officers have limited time and energy to read longer essays. Other application portals have a strict limit and will not allow you to exceed it.
For example, in the Common App , the portal will not allow you to submit more than 650 words. Some colleges using the Common App will allow you to submit less than 250 words, but this is too short for a well-developed essay.
Application portal | Word count | Strict limit? |
---|---|---|
Common App | 250–650 | |
Coalition App | 500–650 | |
UC App | Four 350-word essays |
For scholarship essays , diversity essays , and “Why this college?” essays , word count limits vary. Make sure to verify and respect each prompt’s limit.
Don’t worry too much about word count until the revision stage ; focusing on word count while writing may hinder your creativity. Once you have finished a draft, you can start shortening or expanding your essay if necessary.
Prevent plagiarism. Run a free check.
On some application portals, you can exceed the word limit, but there are good reasons to stay within it:
- To maintain the admissions officer’s attention
- To show you can follow directions
- To demonstrate you can write concisely
Here are some strategies for shortening your essay.
Stay on the main point
It’s good to use vivid imagery, but only include relevant details. Cut any sentences with tangents or unnecessary information.
My father taught me how to strategically hold the marshmallow pierced by a twig at a safe distance from the flames to make sure it didn’t get burned, ensuring a golden brown exterior.
Typically, my father is glued to his computer since he’s a software engineer at Microsoft. But that night, he was the marshmallow master. We waited together as the pillowy sugary goodness caramelized into gooey delight. Good example: Sticks to the point On our camping trip to Yosemite, my family spent time together, away from technology and routine responsibility.
My favorite part was roasting s’mores around the campfire. My father taught me how to hold the marshmallow at a safe distance from the flames, ensuring a golden brown exterior.
These college essay examples also demonstrate how you can cut your essay down to size.
Eliminate wordiness
Delete unnecessary words that clutter your essay. If a word doesn’t add value, cut it.
Here are some common examples of wordiness and how to fix them.
Problem | Solution | |
---|---|---|
We had done a lot of advance planning for our science project. | We had done a lot of planning for our science project. | |
I didn’t know whether or not I should tell the truth. | I didn’t know whether I should tell the truth. | |
When I was a child, I came up with an imaginary friend named Roger to get away from my parents’ fighting. | When I was a child, I invented an imaginary friend named Roger to escape my parents’ fighting. | |
Unnecessary “of” phrases | The mother of my friend was Marissa, who was a member of our church. | My friend’s mother Marissa was a fellow church member. |
False subjects “There is/there are” | There are many large-scale farms in America, but there is a local sustainable farm preserved by my family. | America has many large-scale farms, but my family preserves a local sustainable one. |
Unnecessary qualifiers | I pretty much just wanted a mint chocolate chip ice cream cone from Baskin Robbins. | I wanted a mint chocolate chip ice cream cone from Baskin Robbins. |
Passive voice | Most of the German chocolate cake was eaten by me. | I ate most of the German chocolate cake. |
Unnecessary helping verbs | I am going to be attending my school’s annual carnival. | I will attend my school’s annual carnival. |
Use a paraphrasing tool
If you want to save time, you can make use of a paraphrasing tool . Within the tool you can select the “short” mode to rewrite your essay in less words. Just copy your text in the tool and within 1 click you’ll have shortened your essay.
If you’re significantly under the word count, you’re wasting the opportunity to show depth and authenticity in your essay. Admissions officers may see your short essay as a sign that you’re unable to write a detailed, insightful narrative about yourself.
Here are some strategies for expanding your essay.
Show detailed examples, and don’t tell generic stories
You should include detailed examples that can’t be replicated by another student. Use vivid imagery, the five senses, and specific objects to transport the reader into your story.
My mom cooks the best beef stew. | The sweet smell of caramelized onions and braised beef wafts from the kitchen. My mother attends to the stew as if it’s one of her patients at the hospital, checking every five to 10 minutes on its current state. |
The shepherd’s pie reminded me of familiar flavors. | Reminding me of the warm, comforting blanket from my childhood, the shepherd’s pie tasted like home. |
His hands were cracked and rough. | His hands were cracked and rough like alligator skin. |
Reveal your feelings and insight
If your essay lacks vulnerability or self-reflection, share your feelings and the lessons you’ve learned.
Be creative with how you express your feelings; rather than simply writing “I’m happy,” use memorable images to help the reader clearly visualize your happiness. Similarly, for insight, include the follow-up actions from your lessons learned; instead of claiming “I became a hard worker,” explain what difficult tasks you accomplished as a result of what you learned.
After my best friend Doug moved away, it was really hard. Before, we used to always talk about video games, barter snacks during lunch, and share secrets. But now, I’m solo. | Before my best friend Doug moved away, we used to do everything together. We would spend countless bus rides discussing and strategizing sessions. At lunch break, we would barter Oreos and Cheez-Its while confiding in each other about whom we wanted to ask to the school dance. But now, I’m Solo, like Han without Chewbacca. |
My mother’s death was difficult. My father’s grief made it difficult for him to take care of me and my brothers, so I took care of them. | After my mom passed, my grief was overwhelming, but my father’s was even deeper. At 13, I cooked, cleaned, and took care of my two younger brothers. Although the household responsibilities were tiring, I liked一and needed一the stability and purpose I derived from the new routine. |
If you want to know more about academic writing , effective communication , or parts of speech , make sure to check out some of our other articles with explanations and examples.
Academic writing
- Writing process
- Transition words
- Passive voice
- Paraphrasing
Communication
- How to end an email
- Ms, mrs, miss
- How to start an email
- I hope this email finds you well
- Hope you are doing well
Parts of speech
- Personal pronouns
- Conjunctions
Most college application portals specify a word count range for your essay, and you should stay within 10% of the upper limit to write a developed and thoughtful essay.
You should aim to stay under the specified word count limit to show you can follow directions and write concisely. However, don’t write too little, as it may seem like you are unwilling or unable to write a detailed and insightful narrative about yourself.
If no word count is specified, we advise keeping your essay between 400 and 600 words.
If you’re struggling to reach the word count for your college essay, add vivid personal stories or share your feelings and insight to give your essay more depth and authenticity.
If your college essay goes over the word count limit , cut any sentences with tangents or irrelevant details. Delete unnecessary words that clutter your essay.
You can speed up this process by shortening and smoothing your writing with a paraphrasing tool . After that, you can use the summarizer to shorten it even more.
There is no set number of paragraphs in a college admissions essay . College admissions essays can diverge from the traditional five-paragraph essay structure that you learned in English class. Just make sure to stay under the specified word count .
Cite this Scribbr article
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Reduce Word Count Generator
Cut your word count without reducing the content. This tool is very easy to use:
- Paste the text.
- Mind that there is a 15,000-character limit.
- Choose text reduction options.
- Click the button.
- Copy the text to the clipboard.
⭐️ Word Count Reducer: the Benefits
- ✒️ What Is Cut-Down-Word-Count Generator?
- ✂️ How to Cut Down Words?
- 👍 Word Cutter Do's & Don'ts
🖇️ References
🔀 Flexible | Choose the length of your summary. |
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🤗 User-friendly | Enjoy the intuitive interface of the word reducer. |
💸 Free | Cut down words online for free. |
🚅 Fast | Get the result in several seconds. |
✒️ Reduce Word Count Generator: What Is It?
Cut-Down-Word-Count Generator is a free online tool that summarizes texts and reduces sentence and word count. It cuts out unnecessary words , phrases, and sentences but doesn't change the sense of a text. This is a helpful instrument for students, journalists, and other people who work with loads of written information.
Besides reducing your writing, you can also use the tool to summarize books, short novels, and articles on any topic. Artificial intelligence finds keywords and decides which sentences and words are the most essential.
The tool is also fully compatible with Grammarly – you can edit the text on our page if you have an extension.
✂️ How to Cut Down Words in My Essay?
Automatic tools are great when you need to work with extensive text . However, consider manual summarizing for more flexibility.
Here's how to reduce your word count manually:
- Find and highlight the key messages . If you do it thoroughly, you will preserve the initial sense of a text.
- Cut out adjectives and adverbs . Many of them are just filler words that serve only the aesthetic features of a text. That is why you won't lose the main points if you delete them.
- Look for synonyms and synonymic collocations . To avoid plagiarism in academic papers, use synonyms when referring to another author's thoughts. And you will still need to give them a reference.
- Change structures . Simplifying sentences is another way to reduce the word count. Just rewrite lengthy and overcomplicated grammar.
- One paragraph – one idea . Each section should focus only on one idea or answer one question. Keep your paragraphs at 200-300 and sentences at 15-25 words.
Words and Phrases to Avoid
You will also need to work on vocabulary . In this part, we will explain how to avoid excessive wording and bring your essay to academic standards.
Don't Use | Examples |
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. These are unnecessary for sentence structure; you can remove them without altering the text. | Stunning, ugly, beautiful, horrible, great, boring, fantastic, obviously, of course, very. |
. Better think of shorter and less overused phrases. | Think outside the box, play your cards right, time will tell. |
. Informal words and phrases are not appropriate in academic writing. | A bit, a couple of, kind of, sort of, you, your. |
. Replace them with one word or remove them. | |
. Sometimes it is better to use more wordy structures to make the text appropriate. |
👍 Word Cutter for Essays: Do's and Don'ts
This list of practical recommendations will help you use the word remover to its max.
- Don't paste long texts . The word limit allows us to summarize extensive passages, but we don't recommend it. Instead of cutting the whole text, work with each part separately.
- Don't simply copy and paste the results into your essay . You will likely need to modify the reduced text to create a smooth final version.
- Divide texts into logical parts . The AI will identify the main points quicker and have fewer error risks. It will also make it easier for you to navigate and spot mistakes.
- Check the results . It will be easier for you to manually correct inaccuracies at the very first stage. The tool is fast, but the human brain is more capable of understanding writing subtleties.
- Remove plagiarism . This is not a paraphrasing tool , so you must work on plagiarism. If it is just for personal use, you can leave the text as it is. Otherwise, you will need to quote or paraphrase the text to avoid plagiarized content.
- Work on word choice . Some texts you use might not be suitable for academic writing or your instructor's requirements. Devote some time to put the vocabulary in order.
📝 Word Reducing Example
Check out this example of a text summarized by our word reducer.
Original text
In the current study, several limitations of the research are necessary to mention. While random sampling will ensure representativeness and a low level of bias, there is a risk of limited outcomes in quantitative analysis. Since the questionnaires use structured and close-ended questions, there is a possibility of limited outcomes, which means that the results cannot always represent the actual occurrence in generalized forms.
Since respondents have limited response options that the researcher designed, the outcomes thus ultimately depend on the perspective taken by a scholar when creating the questions. Another significant limitation of the study is the limited availability of secondary data that can be applied to the research context. While the subject matter is widespread, there has been little research on implementing a sports education instructional program at educational facilities. Finally, data may not be robust enough to make conclusions regarding study findings.
Full text: Jeddah University: Sports Health Education Instructional Program - 4403 Words | Free Paper Example
Reduced version:
Since the questionnaires use structured and close-ended questions, there is a possibility of limited outcomes, which means that the results cannot always represent the actual occurrence in generalized forms. Another significant limitation of the study is the limited availability of secondary data that can be applied to the research context. While the subject matter is widespread, there has been little research on implementing a sports education instructional program at educational facilities.
Updated: Aug 24th, 2023
- 10 Tips for Cutting Your Word Count | The University of Adelaide
- Top Words to Avoid in Academic Writing | Useful Advices & Tricks
- Summarizing: How to effectively summarize the work of others | SFU Library
- The Writing Center | When to Summarize, Paraphrase, and...
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3. Remove Adverbs and Adjectives. Adverbs modify verbs, and adjectives modify nouns. But good words don't need modifying. Most adverbs and adjectives weaken strong verbs and nouns, which weaken the power of your writing. Omit unnecessary adverbs and adjectives to make your writing stronger and more concise.
Cut and paste, moving things around. Think about your reader, who they are, and what they see through your writing. (Also conveniently, if you need a quick lesson on who your audience is, you can check out that same Show Don't Tell post.) And don't worry if your drafts are over the limit by hundreds of words.
7 ways to reduce word count. When trying to reduce word count it's important to use a scalpel and not an axe—meaning you don't want to delete large portions of your paper to ensure you're below the maximum word count. Instead, you want to find small but significant ways to bring down your word count. 1 Look for redundancies in your argument
5. Stop using "What" and "There" as subjects. 6. Drop the conjunctions. 7. Forget the running starts. 8. Use shorter words. Anyone who has ever tried covering complex topics with a maximum word ceiling can tell you that it can be challenging to reduce the word count without sacrificing the meaning or flow of your piece.
1. Delete your three Worst Paragraphs. I usually aim to go over my word count intentionally so I can creatively make the essay shorter in a way that increases my marks. If I go over the word count, I can look back over my piece and find my worst performing paragraphs and remove them.
9. Cut repetitions. Carefully reading through your text to cut out repetitions—text or content—is an easy way to quickly reduce your word count. This process is often more time-consuming than some of the other tricks. But it can also lead to more significant cuts than a word here and there.
If your college essay goes over the word count limit, cut any sentences with tangents or irrelevant details. Delete unnecessary words that clutter your essay. You can speed up this process by shortening and smoothing your writing with a paraphrasing tool. After that, you can use the summarizer to shorten it even more.
Use contractions: This is a rather sneaky trick, but by contracting two words into one, you're easily reducing your word count without changing the meaning at all. For example, change "I have" to "I've" or "Would not" to "Wouldn't". Be careful though, if you are writing in formal context for an essay, CV or assignment, it ...
Here's an example: "They beat the opposing team by a lot of points.". While "beat" is accurate in this case, it's not the perfect verb because they not only beat the team, they beat the team by a lot. Using the better verb "trounce" in this instant will reduce the word count while still giving the same meaning as the longer ...
Peace and quiet. Hope and desire. Tidy and presentable. 7. Remove 'helping words'. This technique can take a little practice to implement but it can reduce your word count quickly. Sentences including words in the form of ' be ' or ' have ' can often be edited and rearranged to reduce word count and add clarity.
Some essay prompts will have a suggested minimum- for example, 500 to 650 words. As mentioned above, online text input fields may cut you off at the maximum word count. Some may even have some red text reminding you to input at least 500 words. But you should always double-check these word count guidelines.
Here are 5 tricks I've discovered since then that help me reduce my word count when writing. 1. Eliminate redundant wording. Once you're on a roll, it can be easy for extra words to sneak into your writing. Sometimes another word in the sentence already says the same thing. Other times, the structure of the sentence already implies the ...
9. Use possessive nouns. Read through your essay and look for "of the" phrasing when describing a noun. Use the noun's possessive form to eliminate words. The intricacy of the design amazed me. becomes. The design's intricacy amazed me. 10. Use the plural when possible.
Technique #4: Cutting out a Section. This technique works very well to cut out a big chunk of your essay in one fell swoop. Let's say that you wrote an essay in which you have four supporting points to prove your main point, your thesis. If this is a 2,000-word essay, then each section is approximately 500 words long.
Essay Trimmer is an online tool that can help you reduce the length of any text to a specified number of sentences. It picks the most important sentences, thus decreasing the word count without changing the core message of the piece. This online word cutter can be especially beneficial for those working with a lot of written content.
For instance, you will understand that you need to reserve 2 days for a 3,000-word essay and can manage a 500-word essay in 2 or 3 hours. Besides, the word count sets the scope for your research; you will surely need to check fewer literary sources for a 500-word essay and visit a library a couple of times to write a large-scale 5,000-word study.
The entire process is automated and lets you submit an essay with an exact word count without losing the important content. Here's how you can use the decrease word count tool: Paste your text into the first window; Select the number of sentences you want the summary to have; Choose to see the keywords of the text; Press "Decrease" and ...
Revised on June 1, 2023. Most college application portals specify a word count range for your essay, and you should stay within 10% of the upper limit. If no word count is specified, we advise keeping your essay between 400 and 600 words. You should aim to stay under the specified limit to show you can follow directions and write concisely.
In only 3 hours we'll deliver a custom essay written 100% from scratch Get help. Cut your word count without reducing the content. This tool is very easy to use: Paste the text. Mind that there is a 15,000-character limit. Choose text reduction options. Click the button. Copy the text to the clipboard. Table of Contents.
I'm a few words over my word count for my 4000-word essay (I was 400, previously) and I still need to add my counter-perspective and refine my last draft. I'm really struggling to bring down the word count. ... Unless the writing is particularly verbose, I generally think 5-10% is aggressive for cutting words just through style. Since you've ...
Andrew's editing process happened after he finished writing for a reason. Editing for word count should come in the final stages when you feel like you've told your whole story. Take as many words as you need to tell your truth. Then, refine and edit with each draft. (Yes, plan on writing multiple drafts and revisions - that's how good ...
Rewrite another with those specific details. Chances are that it will still be over limit. Do this once more and at the end all you will need is some fine tuning. I swear it will be the best essay you have written. I was told this last year by a senior of mine. Honestly this was the best advice I ever got.
It sounds like your post is related to essays — please check the A2C Wiki Page on Essays for a list of resources related to essay topics, tips & tricks, and editing advice. Please be cautious of possible plagiarism if you do decide to share your essay with other users. tl;dr: A2C Essay Wiki. I am a bot, and this action was performed ...