A verb is a doing word it adds action to the sentence in which you right.
e.g i am going to walk
i am going to walk quickly
The work quickly is known as an adverb
The word walk is a verb
The adjective for the noun effect is effective.The verb to effect has the participle adjectives effecting and effected.
The correct spelling could be 'affect'- a verb, or 'effect' - a noun.
While affect is a verb meaning to influence or alter (or to assume, as a pose), effect is a noun meaning a consequence or result.---AFFECT is normally a verb, and means "to influence or change."EFFECT is normally a noun, and means the result, consequence, or change that is made.Examples:How does population growth affect us? VERBStudying should positively affect your grades. VERBWhat is the effect of population growth? NOUNDrinking alcohol can have a bad effect on your health. NOUNIf the word is a noun, use "effect." The word affect will almost always be used as an action verb. The word effect can also be a verb, very rarely but obviously used, meaning to cause. (e.g. This law may effect a basic change to our policy.)
The correct spelling is 'affect' - a verb, or 'effect' - a noun.
The noun 'effect is a singular, common, abstract noun.The noun 'effect' is a word for something that is produced; a result or a consequence.Example: Holding a party for the workers had the effectof lifting their spirits.The word 'effect' is also a verb (effect, effects, effecting, effected).The verb 'effect' means to cause to occur or bring about; to produce a result.Example: We hope that the new equipment will effect a greater output.
Depending on the context, effect is already a verb. For example, "to effect something" or to "make something have effect" is an action and therefore a verb.
The verb of effective is effect. As in "to effect something".
No, "consequence" is not a verb; it is a noun. It refers to the result or effect of an action or condition. The verb form related to "consequence" is "consequent," which means to follow as a result or effect.
In the term 'cause and effect', the words 'cause' and 'effect' are nouns, joined by the conjunction 'and'; they are singular, common, abstract nouns.The term 'cause and effect' can be used as a compound subject of a sentence or clause and the compound object of a verb or a preposition. Examples:The cause and effect are obvious in retrospect.You must consider the cause and effect before you decide to act.The word cause is also a verb: cause, causes, causing, caused.The word effect is also a verb: effect, effects, effecting, effected.
The adjective for the noun effect is effective.The verb to effect has the participle adjectives effecting and effected.
The correct spelling could be 'affect'- a verb, or 'effect' - a noun.
Pulleys cannot effect society, effect is not a verb you bozo.
The subject of the verb 'do have' is 'risk factors', which is plural (it can be replaced by 'they'). Therefore the form of the verb must also be the plural form, which is 'do have' ('they do have', not 'they does have'). Do not be misled into thinking that the word 'effect', which is singular, is the subject of the verb 'do have' because it comes first. It is the object of that verb. Because the sentence is a question not a statement, the 'normal' word order for a statement (subject, verb, object) is reversed (object, auxiliary verb, subject, main verb). But it is still the subject that determines the form of the verb.
By changing affect to effect. Affect is a verb; effect is a noun.
It is a noun. For example: The effects of the earthquake were devastating. It's different from affect, which is a verb.
The two separate words are :AFFECT (verb) - to influence or alterEFFECT (noun, verb) - a result, consequence, or change ; to bring aboutThe verb effect means to bring about, as to effect a change. It should not be used instead of affect, which is to influence, as to affect the economy.
Affect is a verb. Effect is what a cause does. Training is a cause, therefor the effect is losing weight. And you are affecting your health positively.