Free AI Verb Generator

Get vivid action words with short definitions for writing, resumes, lessons, games, and product copy.

Generate Content

All fields are optional - generate instantly or add details for personalization

Choose the kind of action words you want

Tune the list for writing, resumes, games, lessons, or product copy

Choose base, past, present participle, or command form

Force every verb to start with a specific letter

10 variants
525
3 variants
15

Your Verbs Will Appear Here

Choose a type, use case, form, and starting letter, then click Generate Verbs

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What is an Action Word Tool?

The AI verb generator creates clean lists of real English verbs, each paired with a short definition. Use it when you need action words that fit a specific purpose instead of a recycled random list.

Most random word sites give you one plain verb at a time or a long list with no context. This tool lets you filter by type, use case, form, and starting letter, so the results feel useful right away. Built for writers, teachers, students, job seekers, game hosts, and product teams who need copyable lists rather than grammar tables.

Key Features

Definitions Beside Every Word

Each result includes a short plain-language meaning, so you can understand the word before using it in a draft, lesson, resume, or game.

Filters That Match Real Work

Choose action, motion, communication, creation, thinking, emotion, or technology verbs, then tune the list for writing, resumes, lessons, games, copy, or interface labels.

Forms For The Sentence You Need

Generate base forms, past-tense verbs, present participles, or command-style verbs so the list fits your sentence instead of forcing extra edits.

Letter Control For Games And Lessons

Lock a starting letter when you need alphabet practice, alliteration prompts, word-game rounds, or themed vocabulary cards.

Multiple Lists In One Click

Create up to five side-by-side lists with 5 to 25 verbs each, then copy the batch that fits your project best.

Perfect for novelists revising flat prose, resume writers replacing weak bullet openers, English teachers building vocabulary drills, product designers naming button actions, copywriters testing calls to action, game hosts preparing charades rounds, students practicing grammar, and content teams writing sharper headlines.

How to Use the Action Word Tool

Create a focused list in three steps, then copy it wherever you need stronger verbs.

1

Choose Your Filters

Pick a verb type, use case, form, and optional starting letter. The filters tell the tool what kind of list will actually help you.

2

Generate Your Lists

Set how many verbs you want per list and how many list variants to compare, then click Generate.

3

Copy And Apply

Paste the best list into a draft, lesson plan, resume worksheet, game card, product brief, or brainstorming board.

Who Uses the Action Word Tool?

Here are practical ways to use focused verb lists across writing, work, school, and games.

Verbs For Creative Writing

Choose Creative Writing and Motion or Emotion to find vivid verbs for scenes, character movement, poems, and story prompts.

Verbs For Resume Bullets

Set Use Case to Resume Bullets and Verb Form to Past Tense to build a list of accurate accomplishment starters for work history drafts.

Random Verbs For Charades

Choose Classroom and Games with Action or Motion verbs to create words players can act out, draw, or guess quickly.

Action Words For Kids

Use Language Learning with base-form verbs to make simple vocabulary cards, sentence starters, and classroom movement activities.

Strong Verbs For Copywriting

Pick Copywriting and Communication to find tighter calls to action, headline verbs, product benefit words, and landing-page prompts.

Verbs Starting With A Letter

Set Starts With to any letter for alphabet lessons, alliterative writing exercises, themed lists, or word-game constraints.

Tips for Best Results

Small changes to the filters can produce very different lists, so use them deliberately.

Generate Several Variants Before Choosing

Set Number of Lists to five when you are brainstorming. Comparing variants side by side helps you spot the strongest pattern faster.

Match The Form To The Destination

Use past tense for resume bullets, command form for buttons and instructions, and base form for vocabulary lists or writing prompts.

Use Motion Verbs To Fix Flat Scenes

If a scene feels static, run a Motion list and replace vague actions like went, moved, or looked with verbs that show direction and energy.

Pair Verbs With Nouns For Prompt Cards

Open the random noun tool in another tab and combine one verb with one noun to make quick prompts like "forage + lighthouse" or "whisper + market."

Power Tip: Build Contrast Lists

Generate one list for Communication and another for Emotion, then combine one verb from each to write scenes where what a character says and feels are in tension.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Free AI Verb Generator - Action Words | NavioHQ