The opposite of "afford" is "cannot afford." While "afford" means to have enough resources, typically financial, to support or purchase something, "cannot afford" indicates a lack of sufficient resources to do so. In a broader sense, it can also imply an inability to bear the cost or consequences of a decision or action.
our income for the year is around 110,000 can we afford a 160,000 home loan
Talk to the lender, or you can file Chapter 13 Bankruptcy to lower the payments where you can afford them.
I could not afford a tablet so I went to the bank to loan some money.
if you can afford it.
The garden has to be 36-ft by 39-ft. 150-ft of fence will just enclose it, and the area is 1,404 square feet. If the length didn't have to be 3-ft more than the width, then he could make it 37.5-ft square. The same 150-ft of fence would enclose it, but the area would be 1,406.5 square feet ... a full 0.16%, or 2.5 square feet, more.
The length would be 39 feet and the width 36 feet for a perimeter of 150 feet
You can't afford to not know how to use afford in a sentence.
Max Afford's birth name is Malcolm Afford.
Yes, afford is a verb.
Yes, afford is a verb.
When I asked my parents for a drum kit they told me, "Sorry but we can't afford it right now.".
The past tense of "afford" is "afforded."
Andy Afford was born in 1964.
Thelma Afford died in 1996.
Thelma Afford was born in 1908.
Malcolm Afford was born in 1906.