afford
verb /əˈfɔːd/
/əˈfɔːrd/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they afford | /əˈfɔːd/ /əˈfɔːrd/ |
he / she / it affords | /əˈfɔːdz/ /əˈfɔːrdz/ |
past simple afforded | /əˈfɔːdɪd/ /əˈfɔːrdɪd/ |
past participle afforded | /əˈfɔːdɪd/ /əˈfɔːrdɪd/ |
-ing form affording | /əˈfɔːdɪŋ/ /əˈfɔːrdɪŋ/ |
- afford something Can we afford a new car?
- None of them could afford £50 for a ticket.
- I’d give up work if I could afford it.
- afford to do something We can't afford to go abroad this summer.
- She never took a taxi, even though she could afford to.
- She can well afford to pay for herself.
- They couldn't afford to buy a house there.
- We can't afford to have children.
- afford something to do something He couldn't afford the money to go on the trip.
Wordfinder- afford
- bank
- bankrupt
- capital
- economy
- expense
- finance
- invest
- money
- profit
Extra ExamplesTopics Shoppingb1- I couldn't possibly afford to eat in that restaurant.
- We can afford to go to Miami this year.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- easily
- well
- barely
- …
- be able to
- can
- be unable to
- …
- afford to do something We cannot afford to ignore this warning.
- (formal) They could ill afford to lose any more staff.
- The people who suffer most are those who can least afford to lose.
- We simply can't afford to take any risks.
- afford something She felt she couldn't afford any more time off work.
- We cannot afford any more delays.
- (formal) to provide somebody with something
- afford something The tree affords some shelter from the sun.
- The legislation aims to afford protection to employees.
- afford somebody something Being a college professor affords you the opportunity simply to write and do research.
- The programme affords young people the chance to gain work experience.
More Like This Verbs usually followed by infinitivesVerbs usually followed by infinitives- afford
- agree
- appear
- arrange
- attempt
- beg
- choose
- consent
- decide
- expect
- fail
- happen
- hesitate
- hope
- intend
- learn
- manage
- mean
- neglect
- offer
- prepare
- pretend
- promise
- refuse
- swear
- try
- want
- wish
Word Originlate Old English geforthian, from ge- (prefix implying completeness) + forthian ‘to further’, from forth. The original sense was ‘promote, perform, accomplish’, later ‘manage, be in a position to do’.