The word EFFECT, since it is a noun. It means a result or change.
The word AFFECT is normally a verb, meaning to influence or make a change.
The two are often confused. As a rarely-used verb, effectis used almost exclusively with the word "change". As a rarely-used noun, affect has a psychological meaning.
Example:
"We did not know what the effect would be, or how it would affect the subject."
No, the correct phrasing should be "it doesn't affect our lives." "Effect" is a noun, while "affect" is a verb used to indicate influence or impact.
No, the first letter of a sentence should not be capitalized if an apostrophe precedes it. The apostrophe indicates a contraction or possession and does not affect the capitalization rules for sentences.
You can repeat a word in a sentence for emphasis or to create a poetic or rhythmic effect. It can also be used for clarity or to convey a specific tone or mood in writing. Just be careful not to overuse repetition, as it can sound monotonous or detract from the overall message.
Using the same word twice in a sentence can be effective for emphasis or poetic effect. However, it is generally recommended to avoid repetition to maintain clarity and variety in writing.
It would be much cleaner as:"Can you have the sheriff serve the subpoena?"or - "Will the sheriff serve the subpoena?"
It depends what the sentence is. Affect is a verb, effect is a noun. Eg. The blast affected her health. The effects of the blast were catastrophic.
No. Maybe it should be: They are absolutely right. - They're absolutely right.
It makes people sick. Also, it should be affect, not effect.
question should be: how does virginia's weather affect its wildlife? ....not effect.
the right word is "affect."
No your blood type should have absolutely no affect on your ability to loose weight. Your blood type is determined by antigens in your blood. These should not affect lipid cells or metabolism, which is what affets weight.
There should be no effect from that.
No, the correct phrasing should be "it doesn't affect our lives." "Effect" is a noun, while "affect" is a verb used to indicate influence or impact.
Absolutely. They affect the Earth's air every time they burn coal and wood.
Ask a question ( a question should be an English sentence ) and I, or others, may try to answer it.
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.
One of these words (affect) is a verb -- an action word. The other (effect) is a noun. You can remember the one that is a verb because "affect" begins with an "a," and it shows action: The flu affects each person differently. "Your tardiness will affect your grade," said the teacher. (To affect means to impact or influence.)As for the noun (which begins with the letter "e"), use it like this: I don't know if this will have a good effect, but I think we should try it. The word "effect" often refers to a result, and it often has an adjective right next to it-- a good effect, a bad effect, a positive effect, a negative effect, etc.