Different word for researchers

The academic community can be conservative when it comes to enforcing academic writing style, but your writing shouldn’t be so boring that people lose interest midway through the first paragraph! Given that competition is at an all-time high for academics looking to publish their papers, we know you must be anxious about what you can do to improve your publishing odds.

To be sure, your research must be sound, your paper must be structured logically, and the different manuscript sections must contain the appropriate information. But your research must also be clearly explained. Clarity obviously depends on the correct use of English, and there are many common mistakes that you should watch out for, for example when it comes to articles, prepositions, word choice, and even punctuation. But even if you are on top of your grammar and sentence structure, you can still make your writing more compelling (or more boring) by using powerful verbs and phrases (vs the same weaker ones over and over). So, how do you go about achieving the latter?

Below are a few ways to breathe life into your writing.

1. Analyze Vocabulary Using Word Clouds

Have you heard of “Wordles”? A Wordle is a visual representation of words, with the size of each word being proportional to the number of times it appears in the text it is based on. The original company website seems to have gone out of business, but there are a number of free word cloud generation sites that allow you to copy and paste your draft manuscript into a text box to quickly discover how repetitive your writing is and which verbs you might want to replace to improve your manuscript.

Seeing a visual word cloud of your work might also help you assess the key themes and points readers will glean from your paper. If the Wordle result displays words you hadn’t intended to emphasize, then that’s a sign you should revise your paper to make sure readers will focus on the right information.

As an example, below is a Wordle of our article entitled, “How to Choose the Best title for Your Journal Manuscript.” You can see how frequently certain terms appear in that post, based on the font size of the text. The keywords, “titles,” “journal,” “research,” and “papers,” were all the intended focus of our blog post.

research words and phrases word cloud

2. Study Language Patterns of Similarly Published Works

Study the language pattern found in the most downloaded and cited articles published by your target journal. Understanding the journal’s editorial preferences will help you write in a style that appeals to the publication’s readership.

Another way to analyze the language of a target journal’s papers is to use Wordle (see above). If you copy and paste the text of an article related to your research topic into the applet, you can discover the common phrases and terms the paper’s authors used.

For example, if you were writing a paper on links between smoking and cancer, you might look for a recent review on the topic, preferably published by your target journal. Copy and paste the text into Wordle and examine the key phrases to see if you’ve included similar wording in your own draft. The Wordle result might look like the following, based on the example linked above.

research words and phrases word cloud, cancer study

If you are not sure yet where to publish and just want some generally good examples of descriptive verbs, analytical verbs, and reporting verbs that are commonly used in academic writing, then have a look at this list of useful phrases for research papers.

3. Use More Active and Precise Verbs

Have you heard of synonyms? Of course you have. But have you looked beyond single-word replacements and rephrased entire clauses with stronger, more vivid ones? You’ll find this task is easier to do if you use the active voice more often than the passive voice. Even if you keep your original sentence structure, you can eliminate weak verbs like “be” from your draft and choose more vivid and precise action verbs. As always, however, be careful about using only a thesaurus to identify synonyms. Make sure the substitutes fit the context in which you need a more interesting or “perfect” word. Online dictionaries such as the Merriam-Webster and the Cambridge Dictionary are good sources to check entire phrases in context in case you are unsure whether a synonym is a good match for a word you want to replace. 

To help you build a strong arsenal of commonly used phrases in academic papers, we’ve compiled a list of synonyms you might want to consider when drafting or editing your research paper. While we do not suggest that the phrases in the “Original Word/Phrase” column should be completely avoided, we do recommend interspersing these with the more dynamic terms found under “Recommended Substitutes.”

A. Describing the scope of a current project or prior research

Purpose Original Word/Phrase Recommended Substitute

To express the purpose of a paper or research

  • This paper/ study/ investigation…
  • aims to
This paper + [use the verb that originally followed “aims to”] or This paper + (any other verb listed above as a substitute for “explain”) + who/what/when/where/how X. For example:

  • “This paper applies X to Y,” instead of, “This paper aims to apply X to Y.”
  • “This paper explores how lower sun exposure impacts moods,” instead of, “This paper aims to address the impact of lower sun exposure on moods.”
To introduce the topic of a project or paper

  • The paper/ study/ article/ work…
  • Prior research/ investigations…
  • discusses
  • presents
  • surveys
  • questions
  • highlights
  • outlines
  • features
  • investigates
To describe the analytical scope of a paper or study

  • The paper/ study/ article/ work…
  • Prior research/ investigations…
  • considers
  • analyzes
  • explains
  • evaluates
  • interprets
  • clarifies
  • identifies
  • delves into
  • advances
  • appraises
  • defines
  • dissects
  • probes
  • tests
  • explores

*Adjectives to describe degree can include: briefly, thoroughly, adequately, sufficiently, inadequately, insufficiently, only partially, partially, etc.

To preview other sections of a paper

  • Section X…
  • covers
  • deals with
  • talks about
  • outlines
  • highlights
  • sketches
  • assesses
  • contemplates

[any of the verbs suggested as replacements for “explain,” “analyze,” and “consider” above]

B. Outlining a topic’s background

Purpose Original Word/Phrase Recommended Substitute
To discuss the historical significance of a topic

  • Subject/ Mechanism…
  • plays an important in [nominalization]
  • plays a vital role in [nominalization]
Topic significantly/considerably +

  • influences
  • controls
  • regulates
  • directs
  • inhibits
  • constrains
  • governs

+ who/what/when/where/how…

*In other words, take the nominalized verb and make it the main verb of the sentence.

To describe the historical popularity of a topic

  • X Theory…
  • …is widely accepted as…
  • …is widely used as…
  • Widely accepted, … [to eliminate the weak be verb]
  • The preferred…
  • Commonly/Frequently implemented,… [to eliminate the weak be verb]
  • The prevailing method for…
To describe the recent focus on a topic
  • Much attention has been drawn to
  • …has gained much importance in recent years
  • Discussions regarding X have dominated research in recent years.
  • …has appealed to…
  • …has propelled to the forefront in investigations of Y.
  • … has dramatically/significantly shaped queries on X in recent years.
  • …has critically influenced academic dialogue on Y.
To identify the current majority opinion about a topic
  • The consensus has been that…
  • Prior research generally confirms that…
  • Several studies agree that…
  • Prior research substantiates the belief that…
To discuss the findings of existing literature

  • Previous studies…
  • indicate
  • have documented
  • have demonstrated
  • have shown that
  • contend
  • purport
  • suggest
  • proffer
  • have proven that
  • evidence
To express the breadth of our current knowledge-base, including gaps
  • Much is known about…
  • But, little is known about…
  • The academic community has extensively explored X…
  • Prior research has thoroughly investigated….
  • However, little research has been conducted to show…
  • However, prior studies have failed to evaluate/ identify / (any other word suggested to replace “analyze” above)
To segue into expressing your research question
  • Several theories have been proposed to explain…
  • To solve this problem, many researchers have tried several methods
  • Recent/Previous studies have promoted…
  • Prior investigations have implemented/ queried diverse approaches to…
  • A number of authors have posited…

C. Describing the analytical elements of a paper

Purpose Original Word/Phrase Recommended Substitute
To express agreement between one finding and another

  • This paper/ study/ investigation
  • supports
  • substantiates
  • confirms
  • corroborates
  • underlines
To present contradictory findings

  • This paper/ study/ investigation
  • calls into question
  • challenges
  • disputes
  • rebuts
  • refutes
  • disproves
  • debunks
  • invalidates
  • rejects
  • questions
To discuss limitations of a study
  • The limitations of this paper include:
  • These investigations, however, disregards…
  • This method/ approach fails to…
  • This study only…
  • …falls short of addressing/ identifying / illustrating…
  • A drawback/disadvantage of this framework is…
  • This framework, however, solely pertains to…

D. Discussing results

Purpose Original Word/Phrase Recommended Substitute
To draw inferences from results

  • The data…
  • These findings…
  • suggest
  • show
  • extrapolate
  • deduce
  • surmise
  • approximate
  • derive
  • extract
  • evidence
To describe observations

  • [Observed event or result]…
  • appeared
  • was observed to
  • manifested
  • surfaced
  • materialized
  • yielded
  • generated
  • perceived
  • detected

E. Discussing methods

Purpose Original Word/Phrase Recommended Substitute
To discuss methods

  • This study…
  • X method…
  • used
  • performed
  • applied
  • administered
  • employed
  • diffused
  • disseminated
  • relayed
To describe simulations

  • A simulation…
  • was created to…
  • was used to…
  • was performed to…
This study/ research…

  • simulated
  • replicated
  • imitated

+

“X environment/ condition to..”

+

[any of the verbs suggested as replacements for “analyze” above]

F. Explaining the impact of new research

Purpose Original Word/Phrase Recommended Substitute
To explain the impact of a paper’s findings

  • This paper/ study/ investigation
  • demonstrates
  • shows
  • illustrates
  • proves
  • evidences
  • strengthens (the position that)
To highlight a paper’s conclusion

  • This paper/ study/ investigation
  • establishes
  • proves
  • attributes
  • illustrates
  • advances (the idea that)
To explain how research contributes to the existing knowledge-base

  • This paper/ study/ investigation
  • offers
  • introduces
  • ushers in
  • proffers
  • conveys
  • promotes
  • advocates
  • introduces
  • broach (issue)
  • reveals
  • unveils
  • exposes
  • unearths

Wordvice Writing Resources

For additional information on how to tighten your sentences (e.g., eliminate wordiness and use active voice to greater effect), you can try Wordvice’s FREE APA Citation Generator and learn more about how to proofread and edit your paper to ensure your work is free of errors.

Before submitting your manuscript to academic journals, be sure to get proofreading services and English editing services from Wordvice, including academic editing services, cover letter editing, manuscript editing, and research paper editing services.

We also have a collection of other useful articles for you, for example on how to strengthen your writing style, how to avoid fillers to write more powerful sentences, and how to eliminate prepositions and avoid nominalizations. Additionally, get advice on all the other important aspects of writing a research paper on our academic resources pages.

Our Academic Editing Services

Below is a massive list of researchers words — that is, words related to researchers. The top 4 are: scientists, scientist, research and scholar. You can get the definition(s) of a word in the list below by tapping the question-mark icon next to it. The words at the top of the list are the ones most associated with researchers, and as you go down the relatedness becomes more slight. By default, the words are sorted by relevance/relatedness, but you can also get the most common researchers terms by using the menu below, and there’s also the option to sort the words alphabetically so you can get researchers words starting with a particular letter. You can also filter the word list so it only shows words that are also related to another word of your choosing. So for example, you could enter «scientists» and click «filter», and it’d give you words that are related to researchers and scientists.

You can highlight the terms by the frequency with which they occur in the written English language using the menu below. The frequency data is extracted from the English Wikipedia corpus, and updated regularly. If you just care about the words’ direct semantic similarity to researchers, then there’s probably no need for this.

There are already a bunch of websites on the net that help you find synonyms for various words, but only a handful that help you find related, or even loosely associated words. So although you might see some synonyms of researchers in the list below, many of the words below will have other relationships with researchers — you could see a word with the exact opposite meaning in the word list, for example. So it’s the sort of list that would be useful for helping you build a researchers vocabulary list, or just a general researchers word list for whatever purpose, but it’s not necessarily going to be useful if you’re looking for words that mean the same thing as researchers (though it still might be handy for that).

If you’re looking for names related to researchers (e.g. business names, or pet names), this page might help you come up with ideas. The results below obviously aren’t all going to be applicable for the actual name of your pet/blog/startup/etc., but hopefully they get your mind working and help you see the links between various concepts. If your pet/blog/etc. has something to do with researchers, then it’s obviously a good idea to use concepts or words to do with researchers.

If you don’t find what you’re looking for in the list below, or if there’s some sort of bug and it’s not displaying researchers related words, please send me feedback using this page. Thanks for using the site — I hope it is useful to you! 🐠

That’s about all the researchers related words we’ve got! I hope this list of researchers terms was useful to you in some way or another. The words down here at the bottom of the list will be in some way associated with researchers, but perhaps tenuously (if you’ve currenly got it sorted by relevance, that is). If you have any feedback for the site, please share it here, but please note this is only a hobby project, so I may not be able to make regular updates to the site. Have a nice day! 🐽

The idea for the Describing Words engine came when I was building the engine for Related Words (it’s like a thesaurus, but gives you a much broader set of related words, rather than just synonyms). While playing around with word vectors and the «HasProperty» API of conceptnet, I had a bit of fun trying to get the adjectives which commonly describe a word. Eventually I realised that there’s a much better way of doing this: parse books!

Project Gutenberg was the initial corpus, but the parser got greedier and greedier and I ended up feeding it somewhere around 100 gigabytes of text files — mostly fiction, including many contemporary works. The parser simply looks through each book and pulls out the various descriptions of nouns.

Hopefully it’s more than just a novelty and some people will actually find it useful for their writing and brainstorming, but one neat little thing to try is to compare two nouns which are similar, but different in some significant way — for example, gender is interesting: «woman» versus «man» and «boy» versus «girl». On an inital quick analysis it seems that authors of fiction are at least 4x more likely to describe women (as opposed to men) with beauty-related terms (regarding their weight, features and general attractiveness). In fact, «beautiful» is possibly the most widely used adjective for women in all of the world’s literature, which is quite in line with the general unidimensional representation of women in many other media forms. If anyone wants to do further research into this, let me know and I can give you a lot more data (for example, there are about 25000 different entries for «woman» — too many to show here).

The blueness of the results represents their relative frequency. You can hover over an item for a second and the frequency score should pop up. The «uniqueness» sorting is default, and thanks to my Complicated Algorithm™, it orders them by the adjectives’ uniqueness to that particular noun relative to other nouns (it’s actually pretty simple). As you’d expect, you can click the «Sort By Usage Frequency» button to adjectives by their usage frequency for that noun.

Special thanks to the contributors of the open-source mongodb which was used in this project.

Please note that Describing Words uses third party scripts (such as Google Analytics and advertisements) which use cookies. To learn more, see the privacy policy.

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Home>Words that start with R>researcher

How to Say Researcher in Different LanguagesAdvertisement

Categories:
Jobs and Occupations
Science

Please find below many ways to say researcher in different languages. This is the translation of the word «researcher» to over 100 other languages.

Saying researcher in European Languages

Saying researcher in Asian Languages

Saying researcher in Middle-Eastern Languages

Saying researcher in African Languages

Saying researcher in Austronesian Languages

Saying researcher in Other Foreign Languages

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Saying Researcher in European Languages

Language Ways to say researcher
Albanian studiues Edit
Basque ikertzailea Edit
Belarusian даследчык Edit
Bosnian istraživač Edit
Bulgarian изследовател Edit
Catalan investigador Edit
Corsican circadore Edit
Croatian istraživač Edit
Czech výzkumník Edit
Danish forsker Edit
Dutch onderzoeker Edit
Estonian uurija Edit
Finnish tutkija Edit
French chercheur Edit
Frisian ûndersiker Edit
Galician investigador Edit
German Forscher Edit
Greek ερευνητής
[erevnitís]
Edit
Hungarian kutató Edit
Icelandic Rannsóknir Edit
Irish taighdeoir Edit
Italian ricercatore Edit
Latvian pētnieks Edit
Lithuanian tyrėjas Edit
Luxembourgish Fuerscher Edit
Macedonian истражувач Edit
Maltese riċerkatur Edit
Norwegian forsker Edit
Polish badacz Edit
Portuguese investigador Edit
Romanian cercetător Edit
Russian Исследователь
[Issledovatel’]
Edit
Scots Gaelic neach-rannsachaidh Edit
Serbian истраживач
[istrazhivach]
Edit
Slovak výskumník Edit
Slovenian raziskovalec Edit
Spanish investigador Edit
Swedish forskare Edit
Tatar тикшерүче Edit
Ukrainian дослідник
[doslidnyk]
Edit
Welsh ymchwilydd Edit
Yiddish פאָרשער Edit

Saying Researcher in Asian Languages

Language Ways to say researcher
Armenian հետազոտող Edit
Azerbaijani tədqiqatçı Edit
Bengali গবেষক Edit
Chinese Simplified 研究员
[yánjiùyuán]
Edit
Chinese Traditional 研究員
[yánjiùyuán]
Edit
Georgian მკვლევარი Edit
Gujarati સંશોધક Edit
Hindi शोधकर्ता Edit
Hmong soj ntsuam Edit
Japanese 研究者 Edit
Kannada ಸಂಶೋಧಕ Edit
Kazakh зерттеуші Edit
Khmer អ្នកស្រាវជ្រាវ Edit
Korean 연구원
[yeonguwon]
Edit
Kyrgyz изилдөөчү Edit
Lao ນັກຄົ້ນຄວ້າ Edit
Malayalam ഗവേഷകൻ Edit
Marathi संशोधक Edit
Mongolian судлаач Edit
Myanmar (Burmese) သုတေသီ Edit
Nepali शोधकर्ता Edit
Odia ଗବେଷକ Edit
Pashto څیړونکی Edit
Punjabi ਖੋਜਕਰਤਾ Edit
Sindhi محقق Edit
Sinhala පර්යේෂක Edit
Tajik тадќиќотчї Edit
Tamil ஆராய்ச்சியாளர் Edit
Telugu పరిశోధకుడు Edit
Thai นักวิจัย Edit
Turkish araştırmacı Edit
Turkmen gözlegçi Edit
Urdu محقق Edit
Uyghur تەتقىقاتچى Edit
Uzbek tadqiqotchi Edit
Vietnamese nghiên cứu viên Edit

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Saying Researcher in Middle-Eastern Languages

Language Ways to say researcher
Arabic الباحث
[albahith]
Edit
Hebrew חוֹקֵר Edit
Kurdish (Kurmanji) lêkolîner Edit
Persian پژوهشگر Edit

Saying Researcher in African Languages

Language Ways to say researcher
Afrikaans navorser Edit
Amharic ተመራማሪ Edit
Chichewa kafukufuku Edit
Hausa bincike Edit
Igbo na-eme nchọpụta Edit
Kinyarwanda umushakashatsi Edit
Sesotho mofuputsi Edit
Shona mutsvakurudzi Edit
Somali cilmi- Edit
Swahili mtafiti Edit
Xhosa umphandi Edit
Yoruba awadi Edit
Zulu umcwaningi Edit

Saying Researcher in Austronesian Languages

Language Ways to say researcher
Cebuano tigdukiduki Edit
Filipino tagapagpananaliksik Edit
Hawaiian mea noiʻi Edit
Indonesian peneliti Edit
Javanese peneliti Edit
Malagasy mpikaroka Edit
Malay penyelidik Edit
Maori kairangahau Edit
Samoan tagata suʻesuʻe Edit
Sundanese panaliti Edit

Saying Researcher in Other Foreign Languages

Language Ways to say researcher
Esperanto esploristo Edit
Haitian Creole chèchè Edit
Latin researcher Edit

Dictionary Entries near researcher

  • research institute
  • research paper
  • research project
  • researcher
  • reseat
  • resell
  • resemblance

Cite this Entry

«Researcher in Different Languages.» In Different Languages, https://www.indifferentlanguages.com/words/researcher. Accessed 13 Apr 2023.

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Other forms: researchers

A researcher is someone who conducts research, i.e., an organized and systematic investigation into something. Scientists are often described as researchers.

Writers of novels that involve a lot of gathering of information––such as Michael Crichton, who writes about biology––hire researchers to help them gather and synthesize material. Other writers turn into researchers themselves, calling up doctor friends to discover interesting ways their characters can die.

Definitions of researcher

  1. noun

    a scientist who devotes himself or herself to doing research

DISCLAIMER: These example sentences appear in various news sources and books to reflect the usage of the word ‘researcher’.
Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Vocabulary.com or its editors.
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