20 easily confused English words: affect vs effect, fewer vs less, and friends

Some word pairs look identical and mean opposite things. Lock the difference in once โ€” and never lose marks on these again.


These are the pairs that quietly mark out a non-native writer. Native speakers get them wrong too โ€” but readers tend to forgive a native their typos and judge a non-native by them. Unfair, but the bar is real.

Here are the twenty I see slip most often, with a memory trick for each.

Word pairs you probably know but mix up

1. Affect vs effect

Affect (verb) = to influence.
Effect (noun) = the result.

The weather affects my mood. The effect is dramatic.

Memory trick: A is for action (verb). E is for end result (noun).

2. Fewer vs less

Fewer = countable things.
Less = uncountable things.

Fewer people. Less water. Fewer mistakes. Less time.

If you can count them, use “fewer”.

3. Lay vs lie

Lay = put something down (needs an object).
Lie = recline yourself (no object).

Lay the book on the table. I’m going to lie down.

Confusing because the past tense of “lie” is “lay”. (Yes, really.)

4. Loose vs lose

Loose (adjective) = not tight.
Lose (verb) = to misplace or fail to win.

My belt is loose. I don’t want to lose it.

5. Than vs then

Than = comparison.
Then = time or sequence.

She’s taller than me. We ate, then we left.

6. Its vs it’s

Its = belonging to it.
It’s = it is, or it has.

The dog wagged its tail. It’s a beautiful day.

Counterintuitive: its is the possessive form despite having no apostrophe. The apostrophe in it’s is always a contraction.

7. Their vs there vs they’re

Their = belonging to them.
There = in that place.
They’re = they are.

Their car is over there. They’re driving home.

Word pairs that often trip even native speakers

8. Compliment vs complement

Compliment = praise.
Complement = something that completes.

She paid me a compliment. The wine complements the meal.

9. Stationary vs stationery

Stationary = not moving.
Stationery = writing materials.

The car was stationary. I bought new stationery.

Memory trick: e for envelope (stationery).

10. Practice vs practise

British English: practice (noun), practise (verb).
American English: practice for both.

(UK) I need more practice. I practise every day.

11. Principal vs principle

Principal = head of a school, or most important.
Principle = a fundamental rule or belief.

The principal called a meeting. It’s a matter of principle.

Memory trick: the principal is your “pal” (head of school).

12. Accept vs except

Accept = to receive willingly.
Except = excluding.

I accept the offer. Everyone except John was there.

13. Advice vs advise

Advice (noun) = recommendation.
Advise (verb) = to give advice.

She gave me good advice. I advise you to read it.

Pairs that have completely overtaken the wrong form

14. Comprise vs compose

The whole comprises the parts.
The parts compose the whole.

The committee comprises five members. Five members compose the committee.

Note: “is comprised of” is so common it’s accepted now, but careful writers still avoid it.

15. Less vs fewer (again, in a tough case)

“10 items or less” at the supermarket is technically wrong (items are countable). It should be “fewer”. Native speakers say both and most don’t notice.

16. Who vs whom

Who = subject.
Whom = object.

Who called? (subject) To whom did you give it? (object)

Honest reality: “whom” is fading from everyday speech. In formal writing it still matters.

Common slip
Correct
The wheather effects me.
The weather affects me.
Less people came today.
Fewer people came today.
Its a great day.
It’s a great day.
Whose going to the party?
Who’s going to the party?
I could of helped.
I could have helped.
โšก Quick check

Sound-alikes worth knowing

17. Bear vs bare

Bear = tolerate, or the animal.
Bare = uncovered.

I can’t bear the noise. He walked in bare feet.

18. Brake vs break

Brake = stop a vehicle.
Break = shatter, or a pause.

19. Personal vs personnel

Personal = private/individual.
Personnel = employees.

My personal email. The personnel department.

20. Could of vs could have

“Could of” is never correct. It’s a mistranscription of the spoken contraction “could’ve”.
I could have helped. โœ“
I could of helped. โœ—

Frequently asked questions

Why is English so cruel about these word pairs?

Most are historical accidents โ€” words that sounded different in older English but converged in modern pronunciation. Some are different languages of origin (Latin vs Germanic). The pairs aren’t designed to confuse; they just happened to.

Will native speakers notice if I get these wrong?

In speech, less often โ€” many of these sound identical. In writing, yes. A misused “its/it’s” or “affect/effect” is one of the fastest ways to look careless to a careful reader.

Is “whom” really still used?

In formal writing, yes โ€” especially academic, legal, or professional. In speech and casual writing, “who” has largely replaced it. “To whom did you speak?” sounds formal; “Who did you speak to?” sounds normal.

How do I drill these into muscle memory?

Three things help: (1) Read your own writing aloud and check each suspect pair. (2) Keep a personal list of the 5 pairs you mix up most and review it weekly. (3) Use spelling/grammar checkers that flag these specifically (Grammarly, LanguageTool, the Hemingway editor).

Sources & further reading