![]() ![]() I’m not sure that it is the right place to ask new questions. The effect of the tornado was devastating. So, if an event affects your life, you will feel the event’s effect. Is it about the difference in meaning, combinability or something else? Effect is a noun, and it means the result of a change. It’s sheer presumption for the government to suggest things have improved since they came to power. They raised taxes on the assumption that it would help control spending.Ģ. Could you please explain it? These are two sentences I have in my IELTS book:ġ. I have checked the English monolingual dictionaries and honestly failed to find the difference. The IELTS Vocabulary books often place them in the FCW section. My question is about two other FCW(frequently confused words): presumption and assumption. Students do often make mistakes using ‘effect’ and ‘affect’ interchangeably as they often do not realise that these words belong to two different parts of speech. ![]() Thank you for the lesson on this pair of frequently confused words. ![]()
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