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affected adjective [ əˈfɛktɪd ]

• influenced or touched by an external factor.
• "affected areas"
• artificial, pretentious, and designed to impress.
• "the gesture appeared both affected and stagy"
Similar: pretentious, high-flown, ostentatious, pompous, grandiose, over-elaborate, overblown, overripe, overworked, overdone, contrived, forced, laboured, strained, stiff, posed, stagy, studied, mannered, hollow, insincere, unconvincing, artificial, unnatural, assumed, pretended, feigned, false, fake, faked, counterfeit, sham, simulated, spurious, pseudo, mock, imitation, la-di-da, hoity-toity, highfalutin, fancy-pants, posey, pseud, phoney, fakey, pretend, put on, poncy, posh, toffee-nosed,
Opposite: natural, unpretentious, genuine,
• disposed or inclined in a specified way.
• "you might become differently affected towards him"

affect verb

• have an effect on; make a difference to.
• "the dampness began to affect my health"
Similar: influence, exert influence on, have an effect on, act on, work on, condition, touch, have an impact on, impact on, take hold of, attack, infect, strike, strike at, hit, change, alter, modify, transform, form, shape, control, govern, determine, decide, guide, sway, bias,
Opposite: be unaffected,
Origin: late Middle English (in the sense ‘attack as a disease’): from French affecter or Latin affect- ‘influenced, affected’, from the verb afficere (see affect2).

affect verb

• pretend to have or feel (something).
• "as usual I affected a supreme unconcern"
Similar: pretend, feign, fake, counterfeit, sham, simulate, fabricate, give the appearance of, make a show of, make a pretence of, play at, go through the motions of, put on, make like,
Origin: late Middle English: from French affecter or Latin affectare ‘aim at’, frequentative of afficere ‘work on, influence’, from ad- ‘at, to’ + facere ‘do’. The original sense was ‘like, love’, hence ‘(like to) use, assume, etc.’.


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