affair

affair
affair 1 Affair, business, concern, matter, thing come into comparison only when they are little more than vague or general terms meaning something done or dealt with. Some or rarely all are used interchangeably in certain similar collocations such as his own affair, business, concern; public and private affairs, concerns, matters, business; a sorry affair, business, matter, thing; affairs, matters, things are in good condition. However, a degree of precision is possible, for each word carries distinctive implications which are not always obscured.
Affair suggests action or performance; it may imply a process, an operation, a proceeding, an undertaking, a transaction
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seeing a book through the press is a laborious and time-wasting affairT. H. Huxley

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In the plural it often denotes transactions of great importance such as those involved in the management of finances or in the carrying on of diplomatic negotiations
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men of affairs

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he had married a rich woman and administered her affairs. He was not supposed . . . to have any affairs of his own— Mary Austin

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Business usually stresses duty or office; sometimes it suggests an imposed task
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because a Thing is every Body’s Business, it is no Body’s BusinessSteele

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the flight of his imagination is very swift: the following of it often a breathless businessDay Lewis

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Concern suggests personal or direct relationship: it often implies an important bearing on one’s welfare, success, or interests; thus, something is not one’s concern because it has no bearing on one’s interests, welfare, or success
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the simplest way out of the difficulty was to do nothing and dismiss the matter as no concern of theirs— Conrad

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Sometimes concern is preferred to affair when that which requires attention involves a degree of anxiety or solicitude
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the concerns of state

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Matter usually is more objective as well as more vague than the preceding words. It generally refers to something that is merely an object of consideration or that is to be dealt with
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he will attend to these matters very soon

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this is still one matter in dispute

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never insist without carrying the matter through— Russell

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Thing is even more indefinite than matter and is often intentionally used when there is a desire to be vague or inexplicit
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he promised that things would be better in the future

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first things should come first

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more things are wrought by prayer than this world dreams of— Tennyson

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these things are managed so well in France— Harte

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2 *amour, intrigue, liaison

New Dictionary of Synonyms. 2014.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Affair — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Affair, relación amorosa casual, sin mayor importancia para sus participantes, la cual se centra en la seducción y entrega de placer. Contenido 1 ¿Por qué se provoca? 2 Etimología 3 Historia …   Wikipedia Español

  • Affair — Af*fair ([a^]f*f[^a]r ), n. [OE. afere, affere, OF. afaire, F. affaire, fr. a faire to do; L.. ad + facere to do. See {Fact}, and cf. {Ado}.] 1. That which is done or is to be done; matter; concern; as, a difficult affair to manage; business of… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • affair — (n.) c.1300, what one has to do, from Anglo French afere, O.Fr. afaire (12c., Mod.Fr. affaire) business, event; rank, estate, from the infinitive phrase à faire to do, from L. ad to (see AD (Cf. ad )) + facere to do, make (see FACTITIOUS …   Etymology dictionary

  • affair — [n1] matter or business to be taken care of; happening activity assignment, avocation, calling, case, circumstance, concern, duty, employment, episode, event, hap, happening, incident, interest, job, mission, obligation, occupation, occurrence,… …   New thesaurus

  • affair — ► NOUN 1) an event of a specified kind or that has previously been referred to. 2) a matter that is a particular person s responsibility. 3) a love affair. 4) (affairs) matters of public interest and importance. ORIGIN from Old French à faire to… …   English terms dictionary

  • affair — [ə fer′] n. [ME afere < OFr afaire < a faire, to do < L ad , to + facere, DO1] 1. a thing to be done; business 2. [pl.] matters of business or concern 3. any matter, occurrence, or thing 4. a social function or gathering …   English World dictionary

  • affair — I noun activity, adventure, avocation, circumstance, duty, employment, enterprise, event, function, happening, incident, interest, matter, occasion, occupation, occurrence, profession, pursuit, subject, transaction, undertaking, work II index… …   Law dictionary

  • Affair — Part of a series on Love …   Wikipedia

  • affair — noun 1 event/situation ADJECTIVE ▪ whole ▪ She saw the whole affair as a great joke. ▪ glittering, grand ▪ I knew that the wedding would be a grand affair. ▪ …   Collocations dictionary

  • affair — [[t]əfe͟ə(r)[/t]] ♦♦ affairs 1) N SING: the N If an event or a series of events has been mentioned and you want to talk about it again, you can refer to it as the affair. The government has mishandled the whole affair... The affair began when… …   English dictionary

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