November 1, 2012

10 most confusing English words

Here is a list of 10 often confused English words.
Do you confuse them too or is your list different?

'DESSERT' or 'DESERT'

Dessert is a sweet dish, while the desert is hot, dry and full of sand.

'ACCEPT' or 'EXCEPT'

To accept means to receive or agree to something,
while except means 'excluding'.

'THERE' or 'THEIR'

The former is an adverb of place while the latter is a possessive pronoun e.g. Their house is over there.

'PRINCIPLE' or 'PRINCIPAL'

Principles are beliefs, values or basic truths, while principal means the head of a school, or the main thing.

'ADVICE' or 'ADVISE'

The former is a noun while the latter is a verb, so you can advise someone by giving them good advice.

'BORROW' or 'LEND'

To borrow means to receive something as a loan, while to lend means to give something as a loan. E.g. Can I borrow your car? Sorry, I can't lend it to you today.

'DESPITE' or 'ALTHOUGH'

These have a similar meaning but are used differently. Despite is a preposition while although is a conjunction. E.g. He won the race despite his injury, He won the race although he had an injury.

'AFFECT' or 'EFFECT'

The former is a verb while the latter is a noun, e.g. The effect of the war is enormous; it has affected all sectors of the economy.

'PERSONAL' or 'PERSONNEL'

Your personal details include your name, age and nationality, while personnel means the employees of a company.

'ASSURE' or 'ENSURE'

To assure someone means to remove doubt or reassure them, while ensure means to make certain that something happens. E.g. I assured him that you would be there, so please ensure that you get to the meeting on time.

(Adapted from English town)

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