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Team California
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If you stick to using "affect" as a verb and "effect" as a noun, you'll be right 99% of the time. That would put you ahead of 99% of the U.S. population.
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Denis The only thing remotely likable about Charlie Kirk was that he was a 1A guy. Think about that one. |
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durn for'ner
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: South of Sweden
Posts: 17,090
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I read plenty of British Porsche magazines and I love their way of using the language. Beautiful although frequently hard to decipher the exact meaning. For example the word 'effect' is many times used in combinations like "..in effect.." or "to the effect that..". I have translated the former into 'actually/in reality' but the latter I am not sure about. What say the expert panel?
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Markus Resident Fluffer Carrera '85 |
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Gon fix it with me hammer
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i'm not english major, nor english native speaker, hell, i'm a high school dropout.
I don't really see why the effect/affect question would be so difficult, to affect you so much that, in effect, you post a thread about it.
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Stijn Vandamme EX911STARGA73EX92477EX94484EX944S8890MPHPINBALLMACHINEAKAEX987C2007 BIMDIESELBMW116D2019 Last edited by svandamme; 07-18-2009 at 01:12 AM.. |
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Registered
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How about flammable and inflammable.
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Slumlord
Join Date: May 2001
Location: Canada
Posts: 4,983
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Flammable and non-flammable.
Dictionary.com: Quote:
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84 Cab - sold! 89 Cab - not quite done 90C4 - winter beater Last edited by Porsche_monkey; 07-18-2009 at 08:03 AM.. |
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Registered
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If it is non flammable, why do they have signs posted warning you that gasoline is inflammable?
![]() Last edited by ruf-porsche; 07-18-2009 at 05:42 AM.. |
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Registered
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: CA
Posts: 7,286
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according to MS dictionary inflammable is flammable. What I don't understand about the "in" rule is sometimes it's the reverse but sometimes it's the encouragement.
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Fat butt 911, 1987 |
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Gon fix it with me hammer
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Ruf-Porsche should have asked "inflammable or unflammable"
And the answer is : The word flammable has it's origin in latin, inflammare, "to set fire to" So the "in" does not have a reversal of what follows. It's not an english "in+...".
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Stijn Vandamme EX911STARGA73EX92477EX94484EX944S8890MPHPINBALLMACHINEAKAEX987C2007 BIMDIESELBMW116D2019 |
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AutoBahned
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= has the same effect as, might as well be, simulates...
~~ less clear to me; got a sample sentence? usually: in as much as, partially correlated with, yada yada... above is for technical writing [biology/physiology], but likely same as regular speech |
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Registered
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Long Beach CA, the sewer by the sea.
Posts: 37,665
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In psychiatry, an affect is a mood, or, therefore a noun. A person can act "affected," which would seem to be an adverb and I think I could use the word as an adjective as well. I think "effect" is always a noun.
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