TOEIC Link Part 5: affect versus effect
Affect and effect are the classic English confusable pair, and Part 5 uses them to test something more precise than spelling: whether you can read part of speech from sentence structure. The two words split along a verb/noun line that holds in the large majority of test items. Once you know the slot in the sentence calls for a verb or a noun, you have the answer — you do not need to "hear" the difference, which is good, because the two are nearly impossible to tell apart by sound.
The core rule: affect = verb, effect = noun
- affect (verb) means to influence or have an impact on: The new policy will affect every department.
- effect (noun) means a result or consequence: The new policy had a positive effect on morale.
So the default mapping is: if the blank needs an action word (a verb), it is affect; if it needs a thing (a noun), it is effect. Reading the slot — verb position or noun position — is the same word-form skill tested across Part 5, the one covered in our guide to word form and part-of-speech recognition.
How to read the slot
You can almost always identify the part of speech from the words immediately around the blank, without weighing meaning at all.
- After a subject and before its object, the slot is a verb, so affect. In Rising costs affect profit margins, the subject costs needs a verb next.
- After an article or adjective, the slot is a noun, so effect. In The policy had a noticeable effect, the phrase a noticeable marks a noun slot.
- After a preposition, the slot is a noun, so effect. In They studied the effect of the merger, the frame the ... of marks a noun slot.
Markers that force the noun effect: an, the, a, this, no, side, little, adverse, of. Markers that force the verb affect: a subject sitting in front of the blank with no determiner, modal verbs (will, can, may, would), or the infinitive marker to. In a plan to affect the outcome, the infinitive slot demands a verb.
The two exceptions Part 5 likes to test
The clean verb/noun split has two well-known reversals, and the exam knows them. Learn these so a correct answer that "looks wrong" does not throw you.
1. "effect" as a verb meaning "to bring about"
Effect can be a formal verb meaning to cause or implement, almost always in the fixed phrase effect change or effect a change:
The new director was hired to effect change across the organization.
Here effect is the verb, not affect, even though it sits in a verb slot. The tell is the object change and the meaning "bring about," not "influence." This phrase is the single most common trap version of the item.
2. "affect" as a noun in psychology
Affect can be a noun (stressed on the first syllable) meaning observable emotion or mood, used in clinical or formal writing:
The patient displayed a flat affect.
This sense is rare on TOEIC-style business content, but it explains why a noun slot occasionally takes affect. If the noun means "emotional expression," it is affect; if it means "result," it is effect.
A fast decision procedure
When a blank could be affect or effect, run it in this order:
- Read the slot. A determiner, adjective, or preposition before the blank points to a noun, so start with effect. A subject, modal, or infinitive before the blank points to a verb, so start with affect.
- Check for "effect change." If the verb slot is followed by change and means "bring about," switch to effect.
- Check meaning only if needed. "influence" points to affect; "result/consequence" points to effect.
Worked examples:
- The weather may affect delivery times. — the modal may creates a verb slot, so affect.
- Analysts measured the effect of the rate cut. — the frame the ... of creates a noun slot, so effect.
- Management hopes to effect lasting improvements. — an infinitive slot, but the meaning is "bring about," so the "effect change" pattern applies and the answer is effect.
- Side effects of the medication are mild. — the fixed compound noun side effects gives effects.
Don't let spelling lull you
Because the words are near-homophones, students who rely on pronunciation guess randomly. The reliable signal is structural, not phonetic: decide verb-or-noun from the slot first, then confirm meaning. That is exactly the discipline in word choice versus word form — knowing which question you are answering: here the "word form" reading (verb vs noun) settles most items before "word choice" (which meaning) ever comes up.
Quick reference
- affect = verb ("to influence"): Costs affect margins.
- effect = noun ("a result"): The effect was positive.
- A determiner, adjective, or preposition before the blank points to effect (noun).
- A subject, modal, or infinitive before the blank points to affect (verb).
- Exception 1: effect change — effect as a verb meaning "bring about."
- Exception 2: a flat affect — affect as a noun meaning "emotional expression."
- Decide part of speech from the slot first; check meaning only to break ties.