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English Tip of the Week
 Effect vs. Affect
Knowing whether to use effect or affect may not qualify you as a genius, but you will be demonstrating an understanding about a grammar issue most people find perplexing. I trust that the strategies offered here will clear up any confusion you have had.
Rule: Use the verb effect when you mean bring about or brought about, cause or caused.
Example: He effected a commotion in the crowd.
Example: She effected a change in procedure.
Rule: Use the noun effect when you mean result.
Example: What effect did that speech have?
Rule: Also use the noun effect whenever any of these words precede it: a, an, any, the, take, into, no.
Note: These words may be separated from effect by an adjective.
Example: That book had a long-lasting effect on my thinking.
Rule: Use the verb affect when you mean to influence rather than to cause.
Example: How do the budget cuts affect your staffing?
Rule: Affect is also used as a noun to mean emotional expression.
Example: She showed little affect when told she had won the lottery.
Due to the E-Newsletter's large readership, we are unable to respond to individual English usage questions.
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Learn all about who and whom, affect and effect, subjects and verbs, adjectives and adverbs, commas, semicolons, quotation marks, and much more by just sitting back and enjoying these easy-to-follow lessons. Tell your colleagues (and boss), children, teachers, and friends. Click here to watch.
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