0
Anonymous Posted 18 years ago
Vocabulary

Affect/Effect

0Hello! I have a small issue with a sentence here, concerning the use of affect/effect. I'm pretty good with grammar, I've always been the guy everyone gave their papers to to read over, and of those papers, few to none have had any grammatical errors when I got done reading over it. That said, affect/effect is usually one I can pick out easily (due to how often it's misused), but this one is even stumping me.02br
00The sentence reads like this (not exact, just trying to replicate the use of the word):02br
00"To effect change, we must consider alternative solutions."02br
00Personally, I think it should be "affect", but I've got someone on my back to change it. Which way is correct here? 0-
  

Top answer

0-

  • 0-
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

5 Answers
0
0Sometimes "effect" can be used as a verb if you mean "bring about a change".0-
0
0I would use "effect" a change - it means to cause a change. On the other hand, to "affect a change" means to influence - to modify something that has been already changed 0-
0
0'Effect' means 'to carry out'. Hence, you should say 'Effect change ...'0-
0
0Yes, "to effect change" is the perfect example of the rare instance in which it's correct to use "effect" as a verb.0-
0
0 01blockquote
01cite10Anonymous12cite10"To effect change, we must consider alternative solutions."12blockquote
10 Correct as written in the quote box above. Paradoxically, the correct use of 01i00effect02i00 as a verb is when it means 01i00cause02i00!!! 05002br
02br

Related Questions