Most common words and phrases in TV series
The frequency lists below are based on my analysis of dialogue from 27 contemporary US American fictional television series (excluding scene headings, descriptions of actions, and so on):
Twenty-Four, NCIS, Rome, Legend of the Seeker, Lost, Tru Calling, Birds of Prey, Bones, The Wire, The Shield, Breaking Bad, Southland, The Big Bang Theory, The Office, Desperate Housewives, How I Met Your Mother , Community, Entourage, United States of Tara, My Name is Earl, Glee, Dollhouse, Grey’s Anatomy, House, In Treatment, Supernatural, True Blood.
The dataset from which these frequency lists have been extracted is described in Bednarek (2014). More recent frequency lists based on a dataset of dialogue from 66 different US TV series can be downloaded from www.syd-tv.com.
There are several reasons why such lists are interesting, aside from a general enthusiasm for language use in popular culture. Screenwriters may want to check what words and phrases are frequent in TV series, either to imitate or to avoid them (cliched dialogue lines). We can also compare such lists with ‘naturally-occurring’ language to find out the extent to which screenwriting language is similar or different to unscripted language. Because this kind of language is broadcast globally to millions of viewers (many of them speakers of English as a Second Language) it is worthwhile investigating it systematically.
There are lists here for the 100 most frequent words, the 50 most frequent 2-word combinations and the 50 most frequent 3-word combinations. Just scroll down to see these. (Note that contractions such as I’m are counted as one word in these lists, because of the software used to compile them.) If you refer to these frequency lists (whether on another website, in teaching, publications or elsewhere), please include a link or reference to this website. For a related study on swearing and taboo expressions in 38 US television series see here.
100 most frequent words
This list only includes words that occur in all of the 27 TV series:
you | we | she | back |
I | your | well | when |
the | was | there | something |
to | so | go | had |
a | be | how | or |
and | just | that’s | didn’t |
it | with | now | were |
of | he | want | off |
that | but | did | we’re |
in | are | going | there’s |
this | all | why | say |
me | right | come | way |
is | like | look | over |
what | get | from | doing |
I’m | about | need | because |
on | you’re | an | what’s |
my | if | time | make |
know | up | who | sorry |
for | out | take | by |
no | one | really | too |
don’t | can | some | should |
not | at | can’t | thing |
it’s | here | tell | thank |
have | got | I’ll | only |
do | think | them | around |
50 most frequent 2-word combinations
This list includes the 50 most frequent 2-word combinations (which may not occur in each episode/TV series).
YOU KNOW | KNOW WHAT |
I DON’T | YOU DON’T |
IN THE | TO DO |
DO YOU | TO GET |
ARE YOU | I HAVE |
THIS IS | OUT OF |
GOING TO | YOU CAN |
TO BE | FOR THE |
ON THE | I’M NOT |
TO THE | I MEAN |
HAVE TO | IN A |
OF THE | I CAN’T |
I KNOW | I NEED |
AND I | NEED TO |
I THINK | BUT I |
YOU HAVE | DID YOU |
DON’T KNOW | FOR A |
I WAS | YOU TO |
WANT TO | I GOT |
COME ON | YOU WANT |
ALL RIGHT | THANK YOU |
YOU THINK | AT THE |
HAVE A | IT’S A |
IF YOU | A LITTLE |
IT WAS | WHAT ARE |
This excel file shows in how many of the 27 TV series these bigrams occur (in
my dataset): 50 most frequent 2-grams
50 most-frequent 3-word combinations
This list includes the 50 most frequent 3-word combinations (which may not occur in each episode/TV series). Note that out of here pops up in this list as 42th most frequent phrase. The phrase Let’s get out of here is often mentioned as the most cliched line or stock phrase in cinema (see an interesting montage here). In addition to get … out of here and let’s get out of here, other usages in my data include You gotta let me out of here, f*** up out of here, give me one good reason not to throw you out of here, I’m out of here, we’re walking out of here together, is there another way out of here. Another interesting phrase is oh my god, which is the 22nd most frequent phrase and may be used so frequently in TV dialogue to avoid less ‘family-friendly’ ways of expressing emotion. Interestingly, the most frequent 3-word combination, namely, I don’t know is also the most frequent in ‘real-life’ conversation.
I DON’T KNOW | I HAVE A |
WHAT DO YOU | I HAVE TO |
WHAT ARE YOU | YOU DON’T KNOW |
YOU KNOW WHAT | NEED YOU TO |
ARE YOU DOING | DO YOU MEAN |
DO YOU THINK | HOW DO YOU |
YOU HAVE A | I TOLD YOU |
YOU KNOW I | NO NO NO |
A LOT OF | WE HAVE TO |
I’M GOING TO | YOU DON’T HAVE |
DON’T WANT TO | DO YOU WANT |
WHY DON’T YOU | THIS IS A |
YOU HAVE TO | I NEED YOU |
YOU WANT TO | WANT YOU TO |
DON’T KNOW WHAT | OUT OF THE |
I WANT TO | TO TALK TO |
I DON’T WANT | OUT OF HERE |
GOING TO BE | TAKE CARE OF |
I NEED TO | WE NEED TO |
DON’T HAVE TO | BY THE WAY |
I DON’T HAVE | GET OUT OF |
OH MY GOD | GO TO THE |
DO YOU HAVE | HAVE TO GO |
DO YOU KNOW | I THINK I |
I DON’T THINK | I THINK IT’S |
This file shows in how many of the 27 TV series these trigrams occur (in my dataset): 50 most frequent 3-grams