affected; affecting; affects
: to produce an effect upon (someone or something):
a
: to act on and cause a change in (someone or something)
Ocean currents affect the weather.
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
affected; affecting; affects
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
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
The words effect and affect are often confused. The most common use of effect is as a noun referring to a change or result.
The defeat had a terrible effect on the players' spirits.
uncertainty about what effect the increase will have
The most common use of affect is as a verb meaning "to produce an effect on."
The new evidence will affect the outcome of the trial.
revisions that affect the final version
If you think of affect as the verb and effect as the noun, most of the time you'll be using the word you want. However, there are some exceptions. Sometimes effect is used as a verb meaning "to cause or bring about" or "to accomplish."
policies that can effect change
Affect is also a noun (pronounced with stress on the first syllable) that refers to an observable emotional response.
notes detailing the patient's affect
Love words? Need even more definitions?
Merriam-Webster unabridged





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