2. Affect, Effect
• These words have slightly different pronunciations and
quite different meanings.
• AFFECT IS ALWAYS A VERB (except for one use as a
noun in psychology) and means “to influence,” “to
cause a response”: “This article will affect my
thinking.” Affect also means “to assume,” “to be given
to,” or “to pretend”: “She affected a silly manner of
speaking.”
3. Affect, Effect
• As a noun, effect means “result,” “accomplishment”:
“What was the effect of this appeal for money?” As a
verb, effect means “to cause,” “to bring about”: “The
new manager will effect major changes in our sales
methods.”
• In plural form, effects can mean “goods,” “property”:
“The deceased man’s effects were willed to charity.”
11. Drown
• People drown. If they are drowned, we have a
homicide. Someone must have drowned them.
12. Due to, because of
• Don’t say, “The game was canceled due to rain.”
Say, “The game was canceled because of rain.”
Or “The cancellation was due to rain.”
13. Either
• It means one or the other, not both.
• Wrong: “The teams lined up on either side of the
field.”
• Right: “One team lined up on each side of the field.” or
“The teams lined up on both sides of the field.”
18. Imply, infer
• A speaker or writer implies; listeners or readers infer.
19. Its, It’s
• Its, like his and hers and ours, is a possessive pronoun.
It has no apostrophe.
• It’s is a contraction for it is.
20. Lay, lie
• Lay means “to place” and is a transitive verb requiring
an object. Lie means to recline, is intransitive, and
takes no object. “I shall lay the rug on the floor.”
“Please lie down here.”
• Lay: lay, laid, laid, laying
• Lie: lie, lay, lain, lying
21. Lay, lie
• Remember, the past tense of lie is lay.
Thus, “They lay here beside me.”
Or “They laid their tools down and walked off.”
22. Less, Fewer
• Use fewer for things you can count. Less grass, fewer
blades of grass. Less wildlife, fewer birds.
23. Like, As
• Like, as a preposition, lets you compare nouns and
pronouns;
• As lets you compare phrases and clauses that contain
verbs.
• He took it like a man.
24. Over, More Than
• Use more than with figures.
• Let over refer to space.
25. Principle, Principal
• The principal, our pal, is the chief administrator of a
school; it can also be an adjective as in “the principal
reasons.”
• A principle is a guiding rule.
26. Reluctant, Reticent
• People who don’t want to act are reluctant.
• If they don’t want to speak, they are reticent.
28. That, Which
• Use which when what is introduced is not essential to
the meaning of the sentence (tangential thoughts).
Use that when what is introduced is essential to the
meaning of the sentence.
• Which introduces a clause set off by commas,
parentheses or dashes.