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TOEFL IELTS BNC: 754 COCA: 963

affect

affect ˈfɛkt/ verb
affects; affected; affecting
affect
ˈfɛkt/
verb
affects; affected; affecting
Learner's definition of AFFECT
[+ object]
: to produce an effect on (someone or something)影响: such as
: to act on (someone or something) and cause a change对…有影响;引起变化
: to cause strong emotions in (someone)(在感情上)深深打动;震撼
: to cause a change in (a part of the body)(疾病)侵袭
: to cause illness in (someone)(使人)染病
Usage用法Do not confuse the verbs affect and effect.不要混淆affect和effect。Affect means to act on or change someone or something.*Affect意为影响或改变某人或某事。
Effect means to cause something to happen.*Effect意为促使某事发生。
Note that the verb affect and the noun effect are used in contexts that are similar.注意:动词affect和名词effect用于相似语境中。
formal : to pretend that a false behavior or feeling is natural or genuine装作;假装
TOEFL IELTS BNC: 754 COCA: 963

affect

1 of 3

verb (1)

af·​fect ə-ˈfekt How to pronounce affect (audio)
a-
affected; affecting; affects

transitive verb

: to produce an effect upon (someone or something):
a
: to act on and cause a change in (someone or something)
Rainfall affects plant growth.
areas to be affected by highway construction
The protein plays a central role in metabolism … which in turn affects the rate of aging. Stephen S. Hall
The 1883 eruption of Krakatau in what is now Indonesia affected global sunsets for years … Evelyn Browning Garriss
Before the 1980s it was not at all clear how nicotine affected the brain. Cynthia Kuhn et al.
b
: to cause illness, symptoms, etc., in (someone or something)
a disease that affects millions of patients each year
… the syndrome can affect the pancreas, which produces insulin … H. Lee Kagan
c
: to produce an emotional response in (someone)
an experience that affected him powerfully
… she traveled to Cuba and was deeply affected by what she saw. Elsa Dixler
d
: to influence (someone or something)
trying not to let emotions affect their decision
affectability noun
affectable adjective

affect

2 of 3

verb (2)

af·​fect ə-ˈfekt How to pronounce affect (audio)
a-
affected; affecting; affects

transitive verb

1
: to put on a false appearance of (something) : to pretend to feel, have, or do (something) : feign
affect indifference
affect surprise
He affected a French accent.
… Fermi often affected an aversion to abstract mathematics. Ed Barbeau
But he affected not to hear … Edith Wharton
2
a
: to often or usually wear or have (something)
affect brightly colored clothing
Chang affected the beard and long robe of an ancient scholar … Constance A. Bond
: to be given to (a preferred style of dress, speech, etc.)
affect a precise way of speaking
b
: to make a display of liking or using (something) : to ostentatiously cultivate or claim (a quality, attitude, etc.)
affect a worldly manner
It was the habit of the moment at Oxford to affect irreverence. T. B. Costain
3
archaic : to have affection for : to feel love or tender attachment for (someone or something)
As for Queen Katharine, he rather respected than affected, rather honored than loved her. Thomas Fuller
I affected Georgette; she was a sensitive and a loving child: to hold her in my lap, or carry her in my arms, was to me a treat. Charlotte Bronte
4
archaic : to tend to have (a specified characteristic or quality)
… the drops of every fluid affect a round figure by the mutual attraction of their parts … Sir Isaac Newton
5
archaic : to often or usually spend time at (a place) or with (a person or group) : frequent
… what birds affect that particular brake … Thomas Hardy
Do not affect the society of your inferiors in rank, nor court that of the great. William Hazlitt
6
archaic : to aspire to : to try to attain (something, such as power)
… this proud man affects imperial sway. John Dryden

affect

3 of 3

noun

af·​fect ˈa-ˌfekt How to pronounce affect (audio)
plural affects
1
[German Affekt, borrowed from Latin affectus] psychology
a
: a set of observable manifestations of an experienced emotion : the facial expressions, gestures, postures, vocal intonations, etc., that typically accompany an emotion
Evidence from several clinical groups indicates that reduced accuracy in decoding facial affect is associated with impaired social competence. Suzane Vassallo et al.
… patients … showed perfectly normal reactions and affects Oliver Sacks
Other victims of schizophrenia sometimes lapse into flat affect, a zombielike state of apparent apathy. David G. Myers
b
: the conscious emotion that occurs in reaction to a thought or experience
Positive affect encompasses all good emotions, such as joy, bliss, love, and contentment. Roy F. Baumeister and Brad J. Bushman
Killing and meaningless mass murder without affect, as the psychologists say, … have become too frequent occurrences in contemporary life. Barbara W. Tuchman
2
obsolete : feeling, affection
For every man with his affects is born, / Not by might mast'red, but by special grace. William Shakespeare
Effect vs. Affect: Usage Guide

Effect and affect are often confused because of their similar spelling and pronunciation. The verb affect entry 2 usually has to do with pretense.

she affected a cheery disposition despite feeling down

The more common verb affect entry 1 denotes having an effect or influence.

the weather affected everyone's mood

The verb effect goes beyond mere influence; it refers to actual achievement of a final result.

the new administration hopes to effect a peace settlement

The uncommon noun affect, which has a meaning relating to psychology, is also sometimes mistakenly used for the very common effect. In ordinary use, the noun you will want is effect.

waiting for the new law to take effect
the weather had an effect on everyone's mood

Choose the Right Synonym for affect

Verb (1)

affect, influence, touch, impress, strike, sway mean to produce or have an effect upon.

affect implies the action of a stimulus that can produce a response or reaction.

the sight affected her to tears

influence implies a force that brings about a change (as in nature or behavior).

our beliefs are influenced by our upbringing

touch may carry a vivid suggestion of close contact and may connote stirring, arousing, or harming.

plants touched by frost
his emotions were touched by her distress

impress stresses the depth and persistence of the effect.

only one of the plans impressed him

strike, similar to but weaker than impress, may convey the notion of sudden sharp perception or appreciation.

struck by the solemnity of the occasion

sway implies the acting of influences that are not resisted or are irresistible, with resulting change in character or course of action.

politicians who are swayed by popular opinion

Verb (2)

assume, affect, pretend, simulate, feign, counterfeit, sham mean to put on a false or deceptive appearance.

assume often implies a justifiable motive rather than an intent to deceive.

assumed an air of cheerfulness around the patients

affect implies making a false show of possessing, using, or feeling.

affected an interest in art

pretend implies an overt and sustained false appearance.

pretended that nothing had happened

simulate suggests a close imitation of the appearance of something.

cosmetics that simulate a suntan

feign implies more artful invention than pretend, less specific mimicry than simulate.

feigned sickness

counterfeit implies achieving the highest degree of verisimilitude of any of these words.

an actor counterfeiting drunkenness

sham implies an obvious falseness that fools only the gullible.

shammed a most unconvincing limp

Example Sentences

Verb (1) As strange as this sounds, the negative karma probably affected the actual games, the way a gambler who constantly dwells on his bad luck can derail an entire blackjack table. Bill Simmons, ESPN, 24 June 2002 The Paris adventures of various Russians, including a romance for Dontsov, affect both the newly democratized ones and hard-line party members. Stanley Kauffmann, New Republic, 27 Feb. 1995 These programs, known as secret warranties or silent recalls, often involve a problem that affects a vehicle's safety or performance but that isn't the cause of a formal Federal recall. Consumer Reports, December 1993 Verb (2) She pauses and affects the more dramatic tone of a veteran actress. Chris Mundy, Rolling Stone, 15 June 1995 She doesn't put herself down, but she does affect a languid Valley Girl drawl to offset the sharpness of her observations … Ken Tucker, Entertainment Weekly, 7 Oct. 1994 That is all I have, I said, affecting a pathos in my voice. Flann O'Brian, At Swim-Two-Birds, 1939 Noun There's a good plot and good writing here, but Mallory's gender neutrality, conspicuous in her lack of affect, makes her seem like a comic-book character. Cynthia Crossen, Wall Street Journal, 5 Oct. 1994 Many of these young killers display an absence of what psychiatrists call affect. They show no discernible emotional reaction to what they have done. Richard Stengel, Time, 16 Sept. 1985 The way people respond to this is sometimes called "depressed affect"—a sort of mental shifting into neutral that psychologists say also happens to prisoners of war, submarine crews, and other people in confined situations with little stimulus. Susan West, Science 84, January/February 1984 See More
Recent Examples on the Web
Verb
Page said her team is now studying how artificial sweeteners affect children's risk of metabolic conditions like diabetes. Aria Bendix, NBC News, 8 Sep. 2022 While the arrival of a new iPhone and its features is a big deal, just as important is how will the new device affect how Apple prices all its older models. Brett Molina, USA TODAY, 7 Sep. 2022 Coach Mike McCarthy declined to address how the addition of Peters will affect the the makeup of the offensive line. Schuyler Dixon, ajc, 5 Sep. 2022 Helga and Zohar contain plastic models of radiation-sensitive organs, such as the uterus and the lungs, so that scientists can study how radiation in space may affect future astronauts. Eleanor Lutz, New York Times, 3 Sep. 2022 Analysts’ views are mixed about how much a sale would affect the company’s outlook. Jennifer Williams-alvarez, WSJ, 2 Sep. 2022 Employees with caregiving responsibilities, for instance, may worry about how a hybrid or full return to office will affect these duties. Paige Mcglauflin, Fortune, 31 Aug. 2022 Its passage is part of a growing push nationwide to hold tech companies like Instagram, TikTok and Snapchat accountable for how their services may affect children’s mental health and safety. Cristiano Lima, Washington Post, 30 Aug. 2022 What are the pros and cons of the subject, and how does that affect the market value? Kristine Gill, Better Homes & Gardens, 30 Aug. 2022 See More

Word History

Etymology

Verb (1)

Middle English affecten, borrowed from Latin affectus, past participle of afficere "to produce an effect on, exert an influence on," from ad- ad- + facere "to do, make, bring about" — more at fact

Verb (2)

Middle English affecten "to desire," borrowed from Anglo-French affeter, affecter "to change, seek after," borrowed from Latin affectāre "to try to accomplish, strive after, pretend to have," frequentative derivative of afficere "to produce an effect on, exert an influence on" — more at affect entry 1

Noun

Middle English, "capacity for emotion, emotion, desire, will," borrowed from Latin affectus "mental state, mood, feeling, affection," from afficere "to produce an effect on, exert an influence on" + -tus, suffix of verbal action — more at affect entry 1

First Known Use

Verb (1)

15th century, in the meaning defined above

Verb (2)

15th century, in the meaning defined at sense 6

Noun

14th century, in the meaning defined at sense 2

Time Traveler
The first known use of affect was in the 14th century
TOEFL IELTS BNC: 754 COCA: 963
affect

verb¹

1influence影響ADVERB | VERB + AFFECT ADVERBdramatically, greatly, materially, radically, significantly極大地/大大地/實質性/根本地/顯著地影響positively積極地影響barely, hardly, not unduly幾乎沒有影響;並未過分地影響Sales did not seem unduly affected.銷售似乎並未受到過分的影響。slightly稍有影響clearly明顯地影響directly, indirectly直接地/間接地影響disproportionately不均衡地影響adversely, badly, negatively, seriously, severely不利地影響;消極地影響;嚴重地影響VERB + AFFECTbe likely to很可能影響developments that are likely to affect the environment很有可能影響環境的發展
affect

verb²

2make sb sad/angry使傷心;使生氣ADVERBdeeply, profoundly使(某人)極度傷心Her death affected him deeply.她的死令他悲痛欲絕。

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