Every 1st and 3rd Thursday, I'll take your editorial questions. Grammar, spelling, punctuation, sentence structure and more! I will showcase questions and answers (with permission) once I get questions as well. To ask a question, please fill out the form below.
I've been a freelance editor since November 2010. If I don't know the answer, I will find it.
Clarissa Draper asks "How do you
remember the difference between "effect" and "affect"?
Great
question, Clarissa. The simple answer is the majority of the time
"effect" is used as a noun and "affect" is used as a verb.
Of course, English language is never quite so simple.
"Effect"
as a noun tends to mean "a result" as in "cause and
effect."
"Affect"
as a verb tends to mean "to influence."
The rare uses
of "affect" and "effect" are where the confusion comes in
even more. In psychology "affect" can be used as a noun as in
"She displayed a happy affect." It involves the mood someone appears
to have.
"Effect"
as a verb means "to bring about" or "to accomplish." Such
as, "The President effected changes within the administration."
A couple
great websites concerning "effect" and "affect" are: http://www.yourdictionary.com/grammar-rules/affect-effect-grammar.html
Except for
the rare cases of "effect" as a verb, I tend to think "cause and
effect" on whether to use "effect" or "affect." If I
can say the sentence or situation before was the cause, then the result is the
effect.
When editing
other people's work, I always pause at "effect" and
"affect." I decide if they are using it as a noun and verb and then
apply the meanings already stated.
Christine Rains asks "Do you find editing your own work any easier now that you've been editing other people's?"
Great answer, Christine. Editing my own work is easier since I've
become an editor, but it is also harder since I'm now aware of so much.
With other people's writing, I'm looking for consistency, awkward
phrases, grammar/spelling, storyline, etc. I look for those things too
in my story, but I can't change much of the writing in the stories I
edit. It's not my writing. They have different ways to say things, so I
can make suggestions for a better verb here, fixing passive voice, or
marking "show, don't tell," but I can't change those things about an
author's writing. In my own, I can, so I sometimes agonize over the
right word or how to show an emotion instead of tell it. I find it takes
me twice as long to edit my own work than another person's for those
reasons.
5 comments:
I found both these questions and their answers extremely useful. It's nice to have a categoric answer re: effect and affect, so thanks!
I use to have a lot of problems with affect and effect. Now I just try never to use effect as a verb!
I have a couple of awards for you, but I see you've already popped by this morning! :)
"affect" and "effect" are a real stumper for me.
What a fantastic idea, Cherie. Thank you so much for this - I'm sure I'll learn a lot!
I have the hardest time teaching my students the difference between affect and effect. I think my new approach is going to be to tell them that affect and effect have been banished from the English language.
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