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Tone and Mood 
The tone and mood words listed below are also available as a Word document. 
Tone and mood both deal with the emotions centered around a piece of writing. Though they 
seem similar and can in fact be related causally, they are in fact quite different. 
Tone 
Tone is the author’s attitude toward a subject. While journalistic writing theoretically has a tone 
of distance and objectivity, all other writing can have various tones. 
If we were to read a description of a first date that included words and phrases like “dreaded” 
and “my buddies forced me to go on the date”, we could assume that the individual didn’t really 
enjoy the date. 
Some tone words include: 
POSITIVE TONE WORDS NEUTRAL 
(+, -, or neutral) 
NEGATIVE TONE WORDS 
admiring 
adoring 
affectionate 
appreciative 
approving 
hilarious 
hopeful 
humorous 
interested 
introspective 
commanding 
direct 
impartial 
indirect 
meditative 
abhorring 
acerbic 
ambiguous 
ambivalent 
angry 
hostile 
impatient 
incredulous 
indifferent 
indignant
bemused 
benevolent 
blithe 
calm 
casual 
celebratory 
cheerful 
comforting 
comic 
compassionate 
complimentary 
conciliatory 
confident 
contented 
delightful 
earnest 
ebullient 
ecstatic 
effusive 
elated 
empathetic 
encouraging 
euphoric 
jovial 
joyful 
laudatory 
light 
lively 
mirthful 
modest 
nostalgic 
optimistic 
passionate 
placid 
playful 
poignant 
proud 
reassuring 
reflective 
relaxed 
respectful 
reverent 
romantic 
sanguine 
scholarly 
self-assured 
objective 
questioning 
speculative 
unambiguous 
unconcerned 
understated 
annoyed 
antagonistic 
anxious 
apathetic 
apprehensive 
belligerent 
bewildered 
biting 
bitter 
blunt 
bossy 
cold 
conceited 
condescending 
confused 
contemptuous 
curt 
cynical 
demanding 
depressed 
derisive 
derogatory 
desolate 
inflammatory 
insecure 
insolent 
irreverent 
lethargic 
melancholy 
mischievous 
miserable 
mocking 
mournful 
nervous 
ominous 
outraged 
paranoid 
pathetic 
patronizing 
pedantic 
pensive 
pessimistic 
pretentious 
psychotic 
resigned 
reticent
excited 
exhilarated 
expectant 
facetious 
fervent 
flippant 
forthright 
friendly 
funny 
gleeful 
gushy 
happy 
sentimental 
serene 
silly 
sprightly 
straightforward 
sympathetic 
tender 
tranquil 
whimsical 
wistful 
worshipful 
zealous 
despairing 
desperate 
detached 
diabolic 
disappointed 
disliking 
disrespectful 
doubtful 
embarrassed 
enraged 
evasive 
fatalistic 
fearful 
forceful 
foreboding 
frantic 
frightened 
frustrated 
furious 
gloomy 
grave 
greedy 
grim 
sarcastic 
sardonic 
scornful 
self-deprecating 
selfish 
serious 
severe 
sinister 
skeptical 
sly 
solemn 
somber 
stern 
stolid 
stressful 
strident 
suspicious 
tense 
threatening 
tragic 
uncertain 
uneasy 
unfriendly
harsh 
haughty 
holier-than-thou 
hopeless 
unsympathetic 
upset 
violent 
wry 
Mood 
Mood is the atmosphere of a piece of writing; it’s the emotions a selection arouses in a reader. 
Some common mood descriptors are: 
POSITIVE MOOD WORDS NEGATIVE MOOD WORDS 
amused 
awed 
bouncy 
calm 
jubilant 
liberating 
light-hearted 
loving 
aggravated 
annoyed 
anxious 
apathetic 
insidious 
intimidated 
irate 
irritated
cheerful 
chipper 
confident 
contemplative 
content 
determined 
dignified 
dreamy 
ecstatic 
empowered 
energetic 
enlightened 
enthralled 
excited 
exhilarated 
flirty 
giddy 
grateful 
harmonious 
hopeful 
hyper 
idyllic 
joyous 
mellow 
nostalgic 
optimistic 
passionate 
peaceful 
playful 
pleased 
refreshed 
rejuvenated 
relaxed 
relieved 
satiated 
satisfied 
sentimental 
silly 
surprised 
sympathetic 
thankful 
thoughtful 
touched 
trustful 
vivacious 
warm 
apprehensive 
barren 
brooding 
cold 
confining 
confused 
cranky 
crushed 
cynical 
depressed 
desolate 
disappointed 
discontented 
distressed 
drained 
dreary 
embarrassed 
enraged 
envious 
exhausted 
fatalistic 
foreboding 
frustrated 
jealous 
lethargic 
lonely 
melancholic 
merciless 
moody 
morose 
nauseated 
nervous 
nightmarish 
numb 
overwhelmed 
painful 
pensive 
pessimistic 
predatory 
rejected 
restless 
scared 
serious 
sick 
somber 
stressed
welcoming futile 
gloomy 
grumpy 
haunting 
heartbroken 
hopeless 
hostile 
indifferent 
infuriated 
suspenseful 
tense 
terrifying 
threatening 
uncomfortable 
vengeful 
violent 
worried 
One good way to see mood (and, to a degree, tone) in action is through genre-crossing movie 
trailers. In film editing classes throughout the States, a common assignment is to take an existing 
film (say, a comedy) and create a film preview that presents the film as a different genre (for 
example, a horror film). This is accomplished through editing and splicing scenes, adding new, 
anxiety-producing music and sound effects, and adding a new voice-over introduction. 
Some of the best examples of this are below. 
 Mary Poppins as a horror film: 
 Dumb and Dumber was turned into a horror film, Lurk and Lurker: 
 The Shining was transformed from horror film into a feel-good romantic comedy: 
This page was last modified on October 2, 2014. 
74 Responses to “Tone and Mood” 
1. lado danny 
August 4, 2011 at 4:36 pm 
thank you so much for listing the adjectives of tone and mood,the difference is easier to 
understand and is improving my grades I feel enlightened,empowered, and refreshed,it’s 
a job well done.BRAVO,BRAVO,……………LITERATURE FOREVER 
Reply
o apple fritter 
October 1, 2014 at 10:36 pm 
i agree 
Reply 
2. Karen B 
March 25, 2012 at 12:37 pm 
I love the movie trailers! Thanks so much for sharing. 
Reply 
3. Tara Davidson 
May 17, 2012 at 12:29 pm 
umm, yes; all of this helped a little with the adjectives with the tone & mood, but its just 
blank..its not entertaining. try to make it more visual appealing! thanks(: 
Reply 
o Mr. Scott 
May 17, 2012 at 3:40 pm 
You create something; if I like it, I’ll post it. 
Reply 
4. storie
June 6, 2012 at 1:13 pm 
u need to be able to click on the word for definition. 
Reply 
o Mr. Scott 
June 6, 2012 at 2:35 pm 
Perhaps. But if that were the case, whence would you gain the satisfaction of the 
search in your quest for knowledge? (In other words, wouldn’t that make it too 
easy?) 
Reply 
 jeidrien 
October 24, 2013 at 1:52 pm 
hihihihihihihihihih 
Reply 
5. J West 
June 19, 2012 at 12:04 pm 
Me likey!! 
Reply 
6. Friday September 14, 2012 | Mrs. Ecker's ENG1D 
September 18, 2012 at 3:39 pm 
[...] to this effect. Check out this link for some examples of changing the mood/tone of a 
movie: http://ourenglishclass.net/class-notes/writing/the-writing-process/craft/tone-and-
mood/ read the information and then scroll to the bottom to see the links to the video 
clips [...] 
Reply 
7. KIERRA LOWE 
September 21, 2012 at 11:25 am 
thanks for the help my seventh grade year is going to rock now that i finally know what 
mood and tone 
Reply 
o Mr. Scott 
September 21, 2012 at 11:26 am 
Glad I could be of help. 
Reply 
 nick terwint 
October 23, 2014 at 8:01 am 
[Entire, profanity-laced message redacted.] 
Reply 
 nick terwint 
October 23, 2014 at 8:04 am 
[Second message, also profanity-lanced, entirely redacted.]
Reply 
 Mr. Scott 
October 26, 2014 at 2:09 pm 
Dear Nick, 
I’m fairly certain that’s not your name: surely you’re not so 
naive as to put your real name here. Still, I’ll call you Nick 
since you gave that name. 
The funny thing about the internet is that it is not 
anonymous, even if you put a false name down. When you 
leave a comment, for example, most web sites record the IP 
address of the visitor. Your IP address when you sent the 
message was 64.246.196.136, which according to 
http://whois.arin.net/http://whois.arin.net/ is registered to 
your school (http://whois.arin.net/rest/ip/64.246.196.136), 
the Milton Hershey school. As such, I’ve sent word to your 
school about your actions. 
Expect your internet privileges to be curtailed shortly. 
Have a nice day. 
8. Melissa 
September 26, 2012 at 7:37 pm 
Thank you needed to understand for my english essay and my mom didnt have a clue. 
Thank you! 
Reply 
o Mr. Scott 
September 26, 2012 at 9:49 pm
Not a problem. 
Reply 
9. Harry 
October 26, 2012 at 11:20 am 
I teach Sophomore english at Milford High School in Cincinnati,OH and I just wanted to 
thank your for this list, I’ll be passing it out to my class on Monday as we start our poetry 
unit. 
Thanks! 
-Harry Smith 
Reply 
o Mr. Scott 
October 26, 2012 at 3:37 pm 
I’m glad it was helpful. 
Reply 
10. sandrina vlahou 
February 26, 2013 at 3:51 pm 
Thank you very much for your post. Great list of adjectives and a good teacher can get 
their students to act out the different emotions created by specific adjectives, make it into 
a contest even teenagers would love that. I also liked the film snippets, Mary Poppins was 
by far the best…a children’s story made creepy!!! wow. 
Thank you once again. 
Reply
11. Kate Mackezie Reed 
April 10, 2013 at 3:01 pm 
It helped SOOOO much! Thank you! I had to make a poster on mood & teach it to the 
class (weird pick, right?) and the examples heped a TON and your descriptions were 
PERECT for a class of oblivious, lazy and dumb 6th graders! 
Thanks, again!!!! 
Reply 
o JJ 
July 25, 2014 at 2:19 pm 
You need to stop teaching if you think your students are “oblivious, lazy and 
dumb 6th graders!” 
Reply 
 Mr. Scott 
July 31, 2014 at 2:05 pm 
If you read that comment closely, you’ll realize that it was another student 
writing that. 
Reply 
 Lisa Hamel 
August 20, 2014 at 8:14 pm 
[...] I just downloaded the Word version of the tone and mood lists, 
and I love it. Have you considered adding your url to the footer of 
the document? You should definitely get credit for your hard work!
Reply 
12. Julie Ward 
April 25, 2013 at 3:43 pm 
Great film clips! Thanks. 
However, I’d be inclined to delete posts that suggests any student(s) to be ‘oblivious, lazy 
and dumb’ and, perhaps, advise that teacher to reassess her opinions, and seek up to date 
training on student-centered pedagogic techniques and effective 
communication/behavioral approaches. 
Reply 
o Mr. Scott 
April 25, 2013 at 3:56 pm 
I think the previous comment came from a student in said class. The fact that she 
said “I had to make a poster on mood & teach it to the class” makes me think it’s 
something that doesn’t happen often, which makes it unlike this is a teacher. 
Additionally, the parenthetical remark, “weird pick, right?” implies that students 
had to choose topics from a list, which the teacher presumably provided. If it were 
a teacher, I probably wouldn’t have approved it. As it is, it sounds like one sixth 
grader referring to her peers (perhaps with tongue in cheek) as “oblivious, lazy 
and dumb.” I would, however, suggest that this student look into the use of the 
Oxford comma! 
Reply 
13. bob 
May 9, 2013 at 8:02 pm 
thanks for the website 
Reply
14. Mellisa 
May 19, 2013 at 6:14 pm 
GOOD 
Reply 
15. Lauren 
June 9, 2013 at 9:16 am 
Thank you so much! I printed out the word document. I’m in my final year of high school 
and I can never find the right word to describe the tone and mood of a text in exams. This 
was super helpful and beautifully laid out. 
Reply 
16. Reiko 
June 12, 2013 at 9:07 pm 
Hello, 
I’m a junior and I was having such a hard time to describe what mood or tone it is for the 
chapters in the books our teacher was making us read! this website is helping me 
tremendously in getting my summer homework done for AP Eng 11. Thank you! 
Reply 
17. mutuma wilfred 
August 5, 2013 at 8:54 am 
kudoz to this post… it has helped me
Reply 
18. Trina Dahl 
August 6, 2013 at 9:42 am 
Centered Around?? You cannot “Center Around” anything — only center ON. 
Reply 
19. Mr. Scott 
August 6, 2013 at 5:28 pm 
Thank you for the comment. Still, I have to disagree, for reasons such as these: 
http://motivatedgrammar.wordpress.com/tag/center-around/ 
Reply 
o kyle kahl 
February 24, 2014 at 2:35 pm 
this gave me a lot of ideas for responses 
Reply 
20. moshej 
October 18, 2013 at 11:10 am 
Much gratitude to you, sir. I have linked to your brilliant resource. You can find me at 
moshej.edublogs.org. 
Reply
21. Grade 11, Week 7 - mrisakson.com 
October 24, 2013 at 12:31 pm 
[…] After discussing our first story, I will be walking you through the difference between 
mood and tone. We will then apply this to our next short story, The Masque of the Red 
Death. Again, I will be […] 
Reply 
22. Grade 11, Week 8 - mrisakson.com 
October 27, 2013 at 11:13 pm 
[…] his particularly dark and morbid stories. If you need a refresher on either mood or 
tone, check out this site. Finally, we will be watching a short video of the story and 
comparing its mood and tone to […] 
Reply 
23. Demari Coppedge 
December 1, 2013 at 6:25 pm 
Oh I get it wow the enternet make everything easy 
Reply 
24. meazy ann resurreccion 
January 8, 2014 at 5:23 am 
thank you 
Reply 
o Mr. Scott 
January 8, 2014 at 7:55 am
You’re welcome. I’m glad you found it useful. 
Reply 
25. Angelina 
February 27, 2014 at 5:47 pm 
You should really try to pu what MOOD means.I already know what TONE is but i want 
to know what MOOD is! This was WORTHLESS!!!!!! 
Reply 
o Mr. Scott 
February 28, 2014 at 10:59 pm 
Thank you for the constructive criticism. I wish you luck finding a web site more 
suited to your needs. 
Reply 
 LamadaPranav 
April 12, 2014 at 3:21 am 
There you go Mr. Scott. I think you should explain the difference more 
because other than reading and looking up the meaning of words I didn’t 
know, I gained nothing out of it. 
http://www.fallriverschools.org/Tone%20and%20Mood%20words%20(un 
edited).pdf 
Reply 
 Mr. Scott
April 12, 2014 at 8:45 pm 
These are merely meant to be notes from class, not actual first-exposure 
instructional material. 
Reply 
26. carolinalotaifgiglio 
March 18, 2014 at 7:46 pm 
thanks for making me understand the difference of tone and mood, really helped me a lot 
in order to get a good grade in my english assignment for “Master Harold” … and they 
boys 
Reply 
27. jade sautter 
March 27, 2014 at 5:27 pm 
Im doing a reading papper in my class in sixth grae and i think that your definitions may 
have some things that you are missing ion this sight. 
Reply 
o Mr. Scott 
March 28, 2014 at 1:45 pm 
I would appreciate any suggestions you could offer. 
Reply 
28. mmhmmmhm
March 28, 2014 at 6:28 pm 
spectacular this is going to help me a lot on the test 
Reply 
o Mr. Scott 
April 2, 2014 at 12:52 pm 
Glad to help. 
Reply 
29. Legend 
April 20, 2014 at 9:22 am 
Brilliant……. very useful for IB English Commentaries 
Reply 
o Mr. Scott 
April 21, 2014 at 8:09 am 
Glad you find it useful. 
Reply 
 meowkitty 
June 17, 2014 at 8:21 pm 
meow its noice
Reply 
 jon 
July 31, 2014 at 1:28 pm 
you sir need to caaaammm dddoooowwwnn 
Reply 
30. Gone Home Lesson 3: Sound Bites, Word Clouds and Vision Quests 
May 5, 2014 at 8:59 pm 
[…] for mood and tone, and then we discussed the distinctions between them. I then 
directed them to a website with extensive lists of tone words and mood words, and tasked 
them to choose 10 words from each […] 
Reply 
31. ASDFFDSA 
May 18, 2014 at 1:23 pm 
This sucks. It doesn’t even tell you what the stupid definitions are. 
Reply 
o Mr. Scott 
May 18, 2014 at 2:05 pm 
Thank you for the constructive criticism. I trust you noticed that this is a site for 
my students, using my lessons, with my general unit plans and goals in mind, and 
that it is not a general help site. To that end, I wish you luck in finding a site that 
meets your needs. This site I found seems like a good place to start for definitions. 
Reply
32. Stephanie Thomas 
May 20, 2014 at 11:12 pm 
Thank you for your list. It helped me tremendously with my assessment rubric. Also, you 
have given me ideas to add to my own class website. 
Reply 
o Mr. Scott 
May 21, 2014 at 8:11 am 
I’m glad you found it useful. As for the web site, it’s a work in progress, about 
seven years in the making. 
Reply 
33. Safa 
June 17, 2014 at 12:48 pm 
You must be the greatest teacher ever for making a website just for your students to 
improve. This helped me a lot during my finals thank you so much. 
~some random 7th grader 
Reply 
o Mr. Scott 
June 17, 2014 at 3:52 pm 
Thank you. It has taken almost ten years to create all of this. 
Reply
34. Hannie 
June 23, 2014 at 2:34 pm 
This was very helpful, thanks a lot 
Reply 
35. Week 6: Developing Mood | The Deep Method 
August 18, 2014 at 12:19 pm 
[…] or joyful! Make sure kids know that they develop mood by making their reader feel 
something. Don’t confuse this with tone, another literary device which refers to the 
author’s attitude toward the […] 
Reply 
36. Thursday, August 21, 2014 | outragerous 
August 21, 2014 at 4:56 pm 
[…] Here are links to help you with the terms: 
http://www.litencyc.com/glossaryMZ.php and http://ourenglishclass.net/class-notes/ 
writing/the-writing-process/craft/tone-and-mood/ MLA: 
http://rwc.hunter.cuny.edu/reading-writing/on-line/mla-sample-research-paper.gif […] 
Reply 
37. Anwar Adam 
September 3, 2014 at 9:18 pm 
Hi, I need a tone word for a situation where the author is fine with both decisions a 
character takes. 
Reply 
o Mr. Scott
September 3, 2014 at 10:26 pm 
Indifferent? Ambivalent? 
Reply 
 Anwar Adam 
September 4, 2014 at 7:00 pm 
I think indifferent works, thank you 
Reply 
38. Today’s Writers’ Tip: Another Common Fiction Mistake | Marsha Hubler: Author of 
THE LOVES OF SNYDER COUNTY SERIES and THE KEYSTONE STABLES BOOKS 
September 22, 2014 at 6:42 pm 
[…] http://ourenglishclass.net/class-notes/writing/the-writing-process/craft/tone-and-mood/ 
[…] 
Reply 
39. lakayila jaide 
September 30, 2014 at 7:22 pm 
uhhh it helped a little with understanding tone and mood, but not really how to find it and 
that is what I am struggling with the most. 
Reply 
o Mr. Scott 
October 1, 2014 at 2:50 pm 
Sorry I couldn’t be of more service. Perhaps if you were in my class and saw how 
I use it there, it would help. But alas…
Reply 
40. Dominick 
September 30, 2014 at 8:24 pm 
i need a negative word were the author is a little down sided with many different stories 
Reply 
o Mr. Scott 
October 1, 2014 at 2:49 pm 
Not sure I understand. 
Reply 
41. Judd Dunagan 
October 24, 2014 at 7:17 am 
Mr. Scott, great article!. I struggle with dyslexia and I am in digital marketing. I recently 
open a company where I am finding myself having to write a lot which I actually like. 
Some times it comes out a little backwards but I can always edit the copy. This post has a 
great way to explain how to write constantly in the same voice for a client. 
Reply 
o Mr. Scott 
October 26, 2014 at 2:16 pm 
Thanks Judd. I took the liberty of removing the link to your web site — it just 
sounded a little spammy. Still, I wanted to give you the benefit of the doubt, so I 
left the actual message up.
Reply 
42. Zofia M.Grajski 
October 29, 2014 at 10:02 am 
Thank you so much for helping me and my young student I tutor in answering the 
question about the mood in stories or books she is assigned to read. It had been 
surprisingly difficult to describe those moods; we had to dug in the thesaurus to come up 
with some answer. 
Many thanks again. 
Reply 
Please let me know how I can help you. 
Agenda 
The Quest 
Recent Comments 
 Mr. Scott on Specific Nouns 
 Zofia M.Grajski on The Teacher 
 Zofia M.Grajski on Tone and Mood 
 Anna C. on Specific Nouns 
 Mr. Scott on Sensory Language 
Archives 
© 2014 Our English Class. Theme Elmax by Saeed Salam 
The Tone List
abashed abrasive abusive accepting 
acerbic acquiescent admiring adoring 
affectionate aghast allusive amused 
angry anxious apologetic apprehensive 
approving arch ardent argumentative 
audacious awe-struck bantering begrudging 
bemused benevolent biting bitter 
blithe boastful bored bristling 
brusque calm candid caressing 
caustic cavalier childish child-like 
clipped cold complimentary condescending 
contemptuous conversational coy critical 
curt cutting cynical defamatory denunciatory 
despairing detached devil-may-care didactic 
disbelieving discouraged disdainful disparaging 
disrespectful distracted doubtful dramatic 
dreamy dry ecstatic entranced 
enthusiastic eulogistic exhilarated exultant 
facetious fanciful fearful flippant 
fond forceful frightened ghoulish 
giddy gleeful glum grim 
guarded guilty happy harsh 
haughty heavy-hearted hollow horrified 
humourous hypercritical indifferent indulgent 
ironic irreverent joking joyful 
languorous languid laudatory light-hearted 
lingering loving marveling melancholy 
mistrustful mocking mysterious naïve 
neutral nostalgic objective peaceful 
pessimistic pitiful playful poignant 
pragmatic proud provocative questioning 
rallying reflective reminiscing reproachful 
resigned respectful restrained reticent 
reverent rueful sad sarcastic 
sardonic satirical satisfied seductive 
self-critical self-dramatizing self-justfying self-mocking
self-pitying self-satisfied sentimental serious 
severe sharp shocked silly 
sly smug solemn somber 
stentorian stern straightforward strident 
stunned subdued swaggering sweet 
sympathetic taunting tense thoughtful 
threatening tired touchy trenchant 
uncertain understated upset urgent 
vexed vibrant wary whimsical 
withering wry zealous

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Our english classdsfg

  • 1. Our English Class Skip to content  Home  About  Lesson Plans  Resources  Class Notes  Calendar  Contact Tone and Mood The tone and mood words listed below are also available as a Word document. Tone and mood both deal with the emotions centered around a piece of writing. Though they seem similar and can in fact be related causally, they are in fact quite different. Tone Tone is the author’s attitude toward a subject. While journalistic writing theoretically has a tone of distance and objectivity, all other writing can have various tones. If we were to read a description of a first date that included words and phrases like “dreaded” and “my buddies forced me to go on the date”, we could assume that the individual didn’t really enjoy the date. Some tone words include: POSITIVE TONE WORDS NEUTRAL (+, -, or neutral) NEGATIVE TONE WORDS admiring adoring affectionate appreciative approving hilarious hopeful humorous interested introspective commanding direct impartial indirect meditative abhorring acerbic ambiguous ambivalent angry hostile impatient incredulous indifferent indignant
  • 2. bemused benevolent blithe calm casual celebratory cheerful comforting comic compassionate complimentary conciliatory confident contented delightful earnest ebullient ecstatic effusive elated empathetic encouraging euphoric jovial joyful laudatory light lively mirthful modest nostalgic optimistic passionate placid playful poignant proud reassuring reflective relaxed respectful reverent romantic sanguine scholarly self-assured objective questioning speculative unambiguous unconcerned understated annoyed antagonistic anxious apathetic apprehensive belligerent bewildered biting bitter blunt bossy cold conceited condescending confused contemptuous curt cynical demanding depressed derisive derogatory desolate inflammatory insecure insolent irreverent lethargic melancholy mischievous miserable mocking mournful nervous ominous outraged paranoid pathetic patronizing pedantic pensive pessimistic pretentious psychotic resigned reticent
  • 3. excited exhilarated expectant facetious fervent flippant forthright friendly funny gleeful gushy happy sentimental serene silly sprightly straightforward sympathetic tender tranquil whimsical wistful worshipful zealous despairing desperate detached diabolic disappointed disliking disrespectful doubtful embarrassed enraged evasive fatalistic fearful forceful foreboding frantic frightened frustrated furious gloomy grave greedy grim sarcastic sardonic scornful self-deprecating selfish serious severe sinister skeptical sly solemn somber stern stolid stressful strident suspicious tense threatening tragic uncertain uneasy unfriendly
  • 4. harsh haughty holier-than-thou hopeless unsympathetic upset violent wry Mood Mood is the atmosphere of a piece of writing; it’s the emotions a selection arouses in a reader. Some common mood descriptors are: POSITIVE MOOD WORDS NEGATIVE MOOD WORDS amused awed bouncy calm jubilant liberating light-hearted loving aggravated annoyed anxious apathetic insidious intimidated irate irritated
  • 5. cheerful chipper confident contemplative content determined dignified dreamy ecstatic empowered energetic enlightened enthralled excited exhilarated flirty giddy grateful harmonious hopeful hyper idyllic joyous mellow nostalgic optimistic passionate peaceful playful pleased refreshed rejuvenated relaxed relieved satiated satisfied sentimental silly surprised sympathetic thankful thoughtful touched trustful vivacious warm apprehensive barren brooding cold confining confused cranky crushed cynical depressed desolate disappointed discontented distressed drained dreary embarrassed enraged envious exhausted fatalistic foreboding frustrated jealous lethargic lonely melancholic merciless moody morose nauseated nervous nightmarish numb overwhelmed painful pensive pessimistic predatory rejected restless scared serious sick somber stressed
  • 6. welcoming futile gloomy grumpy haunting heartbroken hopeless hostile indifferent infuriated suspenseful tense terrifying threatening uncomfortable vengeful violent worried One good way to see mood (and, to a degree, tone) in action is through genre-crossing movie trailers. In film editing classes throughout the States, a common assignment is to take an existing film (say, a comedy) and create a film preview that presents the film as a different genre (for example, a horror film). This is accomplished through editing and splicing scenes, adding new, anxiety-producing music and sound effects, and adding a new voice-over introduction. Some of the best examples of this are below.  Mary Poppins as a horror film:  Dumb and Dumber was turned into a horror film, Lurk and Lurker:  The Shining was transformed from horror film into a feel-good romantic comedy: This page was last modified on October 2, 2014. 74 Responses to “Tone and Mood” 1. lado danny August 4, 2011 at 4:36 pm thank you so much for listing the adjectives of tone and mood,the difference is easier to understand and is improving my grades I feel enlightened,empowered, and refreshed,it’s a job well done.BRAVO,BRAVO,……………LITERATURE FOREVER Reply
  • 7. o apple fritter October 1, 2014 at 10:36 pm i agree Reply 2. Karen B March 25, 2012 at 12:37 pm I love the movie trailers! Thanks so much for sharing. Reply 3. Tara Davidson May 17, 2012 at 12:29 pm umm, yes; all of this helped a little with the adjectives with the tone & mood, but its just blank..its not entertaining. try to make it more visual appealing! thanks(: Reply o Mr. Scott May 17, 2012 at 3:40 pm You create something; if I like it, I’ll post it. Reply 4. storie
  • 8. June 6, 2012 at 1:13 pm u need to be able to click on the word for definition. Reply o Mr. Scott June 6, 2012 at 2:35 pm Perhaps. But if that were the case, whence would you gain the satisfaction of the search in your quest for knowledge? (In other words, wouldn’t that make it too easy?) Reply  jeidrien October 24, 2013 at 1:52 pm hihihihihihihihihih Reply 5. J West June 19, 2012 at 12:04 pm Me likey!! Reply 6. Friday September 14, 2012 | Mrs. Ecker's ENG1D September 18, 2012 at 3:39 pm [...] to this effect. Check out this link for some examples of changing the mood/tone of a movie: http://ourenglishclass.net/class-notes/writing/the-writing-process/craft/tone-and-
  • 9. mood/ read the information and then scroll to the bottom to see the links to the video clips [...] Reply 7. KIERRA LOWE September 21, 2012 at 11:25 am thanks for the help my seventh grade year is going to rock now that i finally know what mood and tone Reply o Mr. Scott September 21, 2012 at 11:26 am Glad I could be of help. Reply  nick terwint October 23, 2014 at 8:01 am [Entire, profanity-laced message redacted.] Reply  nick terwint October 23, 2014 at 8:04 am [Second message, also profanity-lanced, entirely redacted.]
  • 10. Reply  Mr. Scott October 26, 2014 at 2:09 pm Dear Nick, I’m fairly certain that’s not your name: surely you’re not so naive as to put your real name here. Still, I’ll call you Nick since you gave that name. The funny thing about the internet is that it is not anonymous, even if you put a false name down. When you leave a comment, for example, most web sites record the IP address of the visitor. Your IP address when you sent the message was 64.246.196.136, which according to http://whois.arin.net/http://whois.arin.net/ is registered to your school (http://whois.arin.net/rest/ip/64.246.196.136), the Milton Hershey school. As such, I’ve sent word to your school about your actions. Expect your internet privileges to be curtailed shortly. Have a nice day. 8. Melissa September 26, 2012 at 7:37 pm Thank you needed to understand for my english essay and my mom didnt have a clue. Thank you! Reply o Mr. Scott September 26, 2012 at 9:49 pm
  • 11. Not a problem. Reply 9. Harry October 26, 2012 at 11:20 am I teach Sophomore english at Milford High School in Cincinnati,OH and I just wanted to thank your for this list, I’ll be passing it out to my class on Monday as we start our poetry unit. Thanks! -Harry Smith Reply o Mr. Scott October 26, 2012 at 3:37 pm I’m glad it was helpful. Reply 10. sandrina vlahou February 26, 2013 at 3:51 pm Thank you very much for your post. Great list of adjectives and a good teacher can get their students to act out the different emotions created by specific adjectives, make it into a contest even teenagers would love that. I also liked the film snippets, Mary Poppins was by far the best…a children’s story made creepy!!! wow. Thank you once again. Reply
  • 12. 11. Kate Mackezie Reed April 10, 2013 at 3:01 pm It helped SOOOO much! Thank you! I had to make a poster on mood & teach it to the class (weird pick, right?) and the examples heped a TON and your descriptions were PERECT for a class of oblivious, lazy and dumb 6th graders! Thanks, again!!!! Reply o JJ July 25, 2014 at 2:19 pm You need to stop teaching if you think your students are “oblivious, lazy and dumb 6th graders!” Reply  Mr. Scott July 31, 2014 at 2:05 pm If you read that comment closely, you’ll realize that it was another student writing that. Reply  Lisa Hamel August 20, 2014 at 8:14 pm [...] I just downloaded the Word version of the tone and mood lists, and I love it. Have you considered adding your url to the footer of the document? You should definitely get credit for your hard work!
  • 13. Reply 12. Julie Ward April 25, 2013 at 3:43 pm Great film clips! Thanks. However, I’d be inclined to delete posts that suggests any student(s) to be ‘oblivious, lazy and dumb’ and, perhaps, advise that teacher to reassess her opinions, and seek up to date training on student-centered pedagogic techniques and effective communication/behavioral approaches. Reply o Mr. Scott April 25, 2013 at 3:56 pm I think the previous comment came from a student in said class. The fact that she said “I had to make a poster on mood & teach it to the class” makes me think it’s something that doesn’t happen often, which makes it unlike this is a teacher. Additionally, the parenthetical remark, “weird pick, right?” implies that students had to choose topics from a list, which the teacher presumably provided. If it were a teacher, I probably wouldn’t have approved it. As it is, it sounds like one sixth grader referring to her peers (perhaps with tongue in cheek) as “oblivious, lazy and dumb.” I would, however, suggest that this student look into the use of the Oxford comma! Reply 13. bob May 9, 2013 at 8:02 pm thanks for the website Reply
  • 14. 14. Mellisa May 19, 2013 at 6:14 pm GOOD Reply 15. Lauren June 9, 2013 at 9:16 am Thank you so much! I printed out the word document. I’m in my final year of high school and I can never find the right word to describe the tone and mood of a text in exams. This was super helpful and beautifully laid out. Reply 16. Reiko June 12, 2013 at 9:07 pm Hello, I’m a junior and I was having such a hard time to describe what mood or tone it is for the chapters in the books our teacher was making us read! this website is helping me tremendously in getting my summer homework done for AP Eng 11. Thank you! Reply 17. mutuma wilfred August 5, 2013 at 8:54 am kudoz to this post… it has helped me
  • 15. Reply 18. Trina Dahl August 6, 2013 at 9:42 am Centered Around?? You cannot “Center Around” anything — only center ON. Reply 19. Mr. Scott August 6, 2013 at 5:28 pm Thank you for the comment. Still, I have to disagree, for reasons such as these: http://motivatedgrammar.wordpress.com/tag/center-around/ Reply o kyle kahl February 24, 2014 at 2:35 pm this gave me a lot of ideas for responses Reply 20. moshej October 18, 2013 at 11:10 am Much gratitude to you, sir. I have linked to your brilliant resource. You can find me at moshej.edublogs.org. Reply
  • 16. 21. Grade 11, Week 7 - mrisakson.com October 24, 2013 at 12:31 pm […] After discussing our first story, I will be walking you through the difference between mood and tone. We will then apply this to our next short story, The Masque of the Red Death. Again, I will be […] Reply 22. Grade 11, Week 8 - mrisakson.com October 27, 2013 at 11:13 pm […] his particularly dark and morbid stories. If you need a refresher on either mood or tone, check out this site. Finally, we will be watching a short video of the story and comparing its mood and tone to […] Reply 23. Demari Coppedge December 1, 2013 at 6:25 pm Oh I get it wow the enternet make everything easy Reply 24. meazy ann resurreccion January 8, 2014 at 5:23 am thank you Reply o Mr. Scott January 8, 2014 at 7:55 am
  • 17. You’re welcome. I’m glad you found it useful. Reply 25. Angelina February 27, 2014 at 5:47 pm You should really try to pu what MOOD means.I already know what TONE is but i want to know what MOOD is! This was WORTHLESS!!!!!! Reply o Mr. Scott February 28, 2014 at 10:59 pm Thank you for the constructive criticism. I wish you luck finding a web site more suited to your needs. Reply  LamadaPranav April 12, 2014 at 3:21 am There you go Mr. Scott. I think you should explain the difference more because other than reading and looking up the meaning of words I didn’t know, I gained nothing out of it. http://www.fallriverschools.org/Tone%20and%20Mood%20words%20(un edited).pdf Reply  Mr. Scott
  • 18. April 12, 2014 at 8:45 pm These are merely meant to be notes from class, not actual first-exposure instructional material. Reply 26. carolinalotaifgiglio March 18, 2014 at 7:46 pm thanks for making me understand the difference of tone and mood, really helped me a lot in order to get a good grade in my english assignment for “Master Harold” … and they boys Reply 27. jade sautter March 27, 2014 at 5:27 pm Im doing a reading papper in my class in sixth grae and i think that your definitions may have some things that you are missing ion this sight. Reply o Mr. Scott March 28, 2014 at 1:45 pm I would appreciate any suggestions you could offer. Reply 28. mmhmmmhm
  • 19. March 28, 2014 at 6:28 pm spectacular this is going to help me a lot on the test Reply o Mr. Scott April 2, 2014 at 12:52 pm Glad to help. Reply 29. Legend April 20, 2014 at 9:22 am Brilliant……. very useful for IB English Commentaries Reply o Mr. Scott April 21, 2014 at 8:09 am Glad you find it useful. Reply  meowkitty June 17, 2014 at 8:21 pm meow its noice
  • 20. Reply  jon July 31, 2014 at 1:28 pm you sir need to caaaammm dddoooowwwnn Reply 30. Gone Home Lesson 3: Sound Bites, Word Clouds and Vision Quests May 5, 2014 at 8:59 pm […] for mood and tone, and then we discussed the distinctions between them. I then directed them to a website with extensive lists of tone words and mood words, and tasked them to choose 10 words from each […] Reply 31. ASDFFDSA May 18, 2014 at 1:23 pm This sucks. It doesn’t even tell you what the stupid definitions are. Reply o Mr. Scott May 18, 2014 at 2:05 pm Thank you for the constructive criticism. I trust you noticed that this is a site for my students, using my lessons, with my general unit plans and goals in mind, and that it is not a general help site. To that end, I wish you luck in finding a site that meets your needs. This site I found seems like a good place to start for definitions. Reply
  • 21. 32. Stephanie Thomas May 20, 2014 at 11:12 pm Thank you for your list. It helped me tremendously with my assessment rubric. Also, you have given me ideas to add to my own class website. Reply o Mr. Scott May 21, 2014 at 8:11 am I’m glad you found it useful. As for the web site, it’s a work in progress, about seven years in the making. Reply 33. Safa June 17, 2014 at 12:48 pm You must be the greatest teacher ever for making a website just for your students to improve. This helped me a lot during my finals thank you so much. ~some random 7th grader Reply o Mr. Scott June 17, 2014 at 3:52 pm Thank you. It has taken almost ten years to create all of this. Reply
  • 22. 34. Hannie June 23, 2014 at 2:34 pm This was very helpful, thanks a lot Reply 35. Week 6: Developing Mood | The Deep Method August 18, 2014 at 12:19 pm […] or joyful! Make sure kids know that they develop mood by making their reader feel something. Don’t confuse this with tone, another literary device which refers to the author’s attitude toward the […] Reply 36. Thursday, August 21, 2014 | outragerous August 21, 2014 at 4:56 pm […] Here are links to help you with the terms: http://www.litencyc.com/glossaryMZ.php and http://ourenglishclass.net/class-notes/ writing/the-writing-process/craft/tone-and-mood/ MLA: http://rwc.hunter.cuny.edu/reading-writing/on-line/mla-sample-research-paper.gif […] Reply 37. Anwar Adam September 3, 2014 at 9:18 pm Hi, I need a tone word for a situation where the author is fine with both decisions a character takes. Reply o Mr. Scott
  • 23. September 3, 2014 at 10:26 pm Indifferent? Ambivalent? Reply  Anwar Adam September 4, 2014 at 7:00 pm I think indifferent works, thank you Reply 38. Today’s Writers’ Tip: Another Common Fiction Mistake | Marsha Hubler: Author of THE LOVES OF SNYDER COUNTY SERIES and THE KEYSTONE STABLES BOOKS September 22, 2014 at 6:42 pm […] http://ourenglishclass.net/class-notes/writing/the-writing-process/craft/tone-and-mood/ […] Reply 39. lakayila jaide September 30, 2014 at 7:22 pm uhhh it helped a little with understanding tone and mood, but not really how to find it and that is what I am struggling with the most. Reply o Mr. Scott October 1, 2014 at 2:50 pm Sorry I couldn’t be of more service. Perhaps if you were in my class and saw how I use it there, it would help. But alas…
  • 24. Reply 40. Dominick September 30, 2014 at 8:24 pm i need a negative word were the author is a little down sided with many different stories Reply o Mr. Scott October 1, 2014 at 2:49 pm Not sure I understand. Reply 41. Judd Dunagan October 24, 2014 at 7:17 am Mr. Scott, great article!. I struggle with dyslexia and I am in digital marketing. I recently open a company where I am finding myself having to write a lot which I actually like. Some times it comes out a little backwards but I can always edit the copy. This post has a great way to explain how to write constantly in the same voice for a client. Reply o Mr. Scott October 26, 2014 at 2:16 pm Thanks Judd. I took the liberty of removing the link to your web site — it just sounded a little spammy. Still, I wanted to give you the benefit of the doubt, so I left the actual message up.
  • 25. Reply 42. Zofia M.Grajski October 29, 2014 at 10:02 am Thank you so much for helping me and my young student I tutor in answering the question about the mood in stories or books she is assigned to read. It had been surprisingly difficult to describe those moods; we had to dug in the thesaurus to come up with some answer. Many thanks again. Reply Please let me know how I can help you. Agenda The Quest Recent Comments  Mr. Scott on Specific Nouns  Zofia M.Grajski on The Teacher  Zofia M.Grajski on Tone and Mood  Anna C. on Specific Nouns  Mr. Scott on Sensory Language Archives © 2014 Our English Class. Theme Elmax by Saeed Salam The Tone List
  • 26. abashed abrasive abusive accepting acerbic acquiescent admiring adoring affectionate aghast allusive amused angry anxious apologetic apprehensive approving arch ardent argumentative audacious awe-struck bantering begrudging bemused benevolent biting bitter blithe boastful bored bristling brusque calm candid caressing caustic cavalier childish child-like clipped cold complimentary condescending contemptuous conversational coy critical curt cutting cynical defamatory denunciatory despairing detached devil-may-care didactic disbelieving discouraged disdainful disparaging disrespectful distracted doubtful dramatic dreamy dry ecstatic entranced enthusiastic eulogistic exhilarated exultant facetious fanciful fearful flippant fond forceful frightened ghoulish giddy gleeful glum grim guarded guilty happy harsh haughty heavy-hearted hollow horrified humourous hypercritical indifferent indulgent ironic irreverent joking joyful languorous languid laudatory light-hearted lingering loving marveling melancholy mistrustful mocking mysterious naïve neutral nostalgic objective peaceful pessimistic pitiful playful poignant pragmatic proud provocative questioning rallying reflective reminiscing reproachful resigned respectful restrained reticent reverent rueful sad sarcastic sardonic satirical satisfied seductive self-critical self-dramatizing self-justfying self-mocking
  • 27. self-pitying self-satisfied sentimental serious severe sharp shocked silly sly smug solemn somber stentorian stern straightforward strident stunned subdued swaggering sweet sympathetic taunting tense thoughtful threatening tired touchy trenchant uncertain understated upset urgent vexed vibrant wary whimsical withering wry zealous