[begin senseless rant]
Okay, I know that I need to unclench about this one, but I keep seeing people at work writing effect instead of affect, and it's driving me batty. I know that they are virtually homophones, but it shouldn't be too, too hard to remember that almost always affect is a verb while effect is a noun. When you affect something, a
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Comments 59
My heart goes out to you, my friend. Those things drive me nuts, too.
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BWAHAHAHAHAHA!
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EDIT: I am no longer "being" a senseless rant. :-p
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I'll give him that story and stick him with it... er, I mean, stick by him with it.
(Ok, going into things to stick him with... or, things with which to stick him, which is not exactly the same thing... um, where was I?)
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Also, "effect" can be a verb, and "affect" can be a noun, so that's not a hard-and-fast rule.
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Once again, XKCD shows me the way:
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Also you ignored my main point, which was to point out your misuse of the word "continuous":
Continual means "happening over and over again"; continuous means "happening constantly without stopping." If you're continually on the Internet, it means you keep going on; if you're continuously on the Internet, it means you haven't gone off at all.
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Anyway, your career may fall into the edge cases, but mine generally does not. As such, I'd like to keep our usage simpler so as to avoid confusion.
I also just signed up for the "Grammar Girl" daily mailings so that I can be more of a pretentious grammar douchebagaware of common mishaps so as to avoid it in myself. In the meantime, I still want to squash some things that bother me.
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(yes, on purpose)
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