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Tuesday, 27 November 2012

A little grammar lesson: Affect vs Effect

The difference between affect and effect seems really important for The Self Improvement Project! 

I've come across a website called Grammar Girl, which seemed very appropriate, this is what she says: 
"The majority of the time you use affect with an a as a verb and effect with an e as a noun."
When Should You Use Affect? 
Affect with an a means "to influence," as in, "The arrows affected Aardvark," or "The rain affected Amy's hairdo." Affect can also mean, roughly, "to act in a way that you don't feel," as in, "She affected an air of superiority." 

When Should You Use Effect? 
Effect with an e has a lot of subtle meanings as a noun, but to me the meaning "a result" seems to be at the core of all the definitions. For example, you can say, "The effect was eye-popping," or "The sound effects were amazing," or "The rain had no effect on Amy's hairdo." 

"But why Aardvark?" you ask. Because there's also an example to help you remember. It's "The arrows affected Aardvark. The effect was eye-popping." It should be easy to remember that affect with an a goes with the a-words, arrow and aardvark, and that effect with an e goes with the e-word, eye-popping. If you can visualize the sentences, "The arrows affected the aardvark. The effect was eye-popping," it's pretty easy to see that affect with an a is a verb and effect with an e is a noun. 

I thought that was useful!

Check out the full post here:http://grammar.quickanddirtytips.com/affect-versus-effect.aspx

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