Affect | effect
Affect
Affect and effect are often confused because their meanings are so similar. Technically it works like this: affect (spelled with an 'a') is a verb, and effect (spelled with an 'e') is a noun (most of the time).
Affect
Affect verb meaning to influence.
The bully's nasty words affected her deeply.
I knew my sprained ankle would affect my ability to run the following day.
Here is an example from a more academic sentence:
Luck therefore, says Richards (1993, p. 171), does "affect deserts [ie. that which we deserve], but only ...[in]... recognizing that we are not omniscient about such matters, and that we must be responsible in our inferences about them".
Reference:
Richards, N. (1993). Luck and desert. In D. Statman (Ed.) Moral luck. New York, NY: SUNY Press
Effect
Effect is a noun meaning the result of.
The bully's nasty words had no effect on her.
The painkillers for my sprained ankle had an anti-inflammatory and calming effect.
Rare exceptions
Affect is sometimes used as a noun to represent the impact that a person's attitude can have on his or her ability to perform in a certain way. It might be used in an education context with reference to the emotional and external factors that influence a child's ability to learn, or as Artie explained in the first video, in psychology. (It is pronounced / 'ʌfekt / (uh-fect) - with the stress on the A).
In the Solomon Islands the impact of affect is significant with regards to widespread literacy under-achievement in primary schools.
In the Solomon Islands the impact of affect is significant with regards to widespread literacy under-achievement in primary schools.
Amnesty International hopes to effect change in third-world countries.
Both of these exceptions above are specialized (and infrequently applied) uses of these words and are not usually the reason that students get them muddled.