affair

affair — noun

1. a particular topic, problem, or situation that someone is thinking about, workin

1.名詞B2
釋義

a particular topic, problem, or situation that someone is thinking about, working on, or has to handle.

例句

The minister called the strike a serious affair that needed quick action.

adjective + affair (serious / urgent / private)

Maria told her brother that her divorce was her own affair.

possessive + own + affair (= someone's responsibility)

同義詞
  • matter

    more neutral and far more frequent in everyday speech

  • issue

    suggests something debated or causing concern

  • business

    stresses that something belongs to a particular person to handle

文法句型

affair + of + noun

the + adjective + affair

用法筆記

Often paired with an adjective that classifies the matter (private, family, local, personal, internal, simple, complicated). Distinguish from sense 2: here the matter is neutral; in sense 2 it carries scandal or strong public reaction.

常見錯誤

It is none of your affair.
It is none of your business.
💡'business' is the fixed phrase; with 'affair' say 'it is not your affair' or 'mind your own affairs'.
I have many affair to do today.
I have many affairs to deal with today.
💡'affair' is countable, so use plural and a verb like 'deal with' or 'sort out'.

2. a public event or series of actions, often involving wrongdoing by people in pow

2.名詞B2
釋義

a public event or series of actions, often involving wrongdoing by people in power, that shocks or angers many people.

例句

The Watergate affair forced President Nixon to leave office in 1974.

the + proper-noun + affair (named scandal)

Reporters in Taipei kept digging until the bribery affair reached the front page.

noun + affair (bribery / spying / corruption)

同義詞
  • scandal

    stronger and more direct; focuses on moral outrage

  • controversy

    stresses public disagreement rather than wrongdoing

  • case

    more neutral; common in legal or media contexts

文法句型

the + proper-noun + affair

用法筆記

Usually preceded by 'the' plus a name or topic (the Dreyfus affair, the doping affair). Often appears with verbs of investigation and reaction: 'investigate', 'cover up', 'expose', 'be rocked by'.

常見錯誤

There was an affair in the company last year.
There was a scandal in the company last year.
💡without a clear name or descriptor, 'scandal' sounds more natural; 'affair' usually needs a label like 'the bribery affair'.

3. a romantic or sexual connection, often kept secret, between two people when at l

3.名詞B2
釋義

a romantic or sexual connection, often kept secret, between two people when at least one of them is already married to or partnered with someone else.

例句

Daniel ended his marriage after his wife discovered the affair with her colleague.

discover / end / confess + an affair

Sophie had a brief affair with a photographer she met in Paris.

have + a + adj + affair (with someone)

同義詞
  • liaison

    more formal and discreet; often used in journalism

  • fling

    informal; emphasises shortness and lack of commitment

  • romance

    more positive; not necessarily secret or wrong

反義詞
  • marriage

    official, public partnership rather than a hidden one

文法句型

have an affair (with someone)

用法筆記

Almost always implies secrecy, infidelity, or short duration. Use 'have an affair (with)' for the verb pattern. The compound 'love affair' can also describe a strong but temporary enthusiasm for something non-human (e.g. 'her love affair with jazz').

常見錯誤

My boyfriend and I have been having an affair for two years.
My boyfriend and I have been in a relationship for two years.
💡'have an affair' suggests cheating on a partner; use 'relationship' for an open, normal couple.

4. an organised social occasion or gathering, usually labelled by an adjective such

4.名詞B2
釋義

an organised social occasion or gathering, usually labelled by an adjective such as elegant, quiet, glamorous, or dull.

例句

The wedding was a small affair held in a garden behind the church.

a small / quiet / grand affair (describing an event)

Mrs. Chen hosts a charity dinner every spring; it is always a glamorous affair.

a glamorous / formal affair

同義詞
  • occasion

    more neutral and slightly more formal

  • event

    broader; covers any planned happening, not only social ones

  • function

    stresses an organised, often official gathering

文法句型

a + adjective + affair

用法筆記

Almost always takes a descriptive adjective immediately before it (small, grand, formal, casual, low-key, glamorous, dull). Without that adjective, 'affair' rarely means 'social event'.

常見錯誤

I went to an affair last night.
I went to a dinner / party last night.
💡without a describing adjective, 'an affair' on its own does not clearly mean a social event.

5. an object of an unusual or hard-to-describe kind, named loosely by its appearanc

5.名詞C1
釋義

an object of an unusual or hard-to-describe kind, named loosely by its appearance or how it works.

例句

Her hat was an enormous affair covered in feathers and silk roses.

a + adj + affair (loose label for an object)

Grandfather pulled out a strange wooden affair that looked half radio, half clock.

a strange / odd / curious affair

同義詞
  • thing

    much more neutral and far more common in this loose sense

  • contraption

    informal; suggests a complicated, odd-looking machine

  • gadget

    informal; usually a small useful device

文法句型

a + adjective + affair (= object)

用法筆記

Informal and slightly humorous. The speaker uses 'affair' because they cannot or do not want to give the object a precise name. Almost always preceded by an adjective that describes size, material, or appearance.

常見錯誤

I bought an affair for the kitchen.
I bought a strange little affair for the kitchen.
💡this sense needs a descriptive adjective; bare 'an affair' will be misread as a scandal or a relationship.