(affairs)
Frequency: The word is one of the 1500 most common words in English.
1.
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 customs officials inspected a convoy of 60 tankers...
= business, matter
N-SING: the N
2.
You can refer to an important or interesting event or situation as 'the ... affair'. (mainly JOURNALISM)
...the damage caused to the CIA and FBI in the aftermath of the Watergate affair.
N-SING: usu the n-proper N
3.
You can describe the main quality of an event by saying that it is a particular kind of affair.
Michael said that his planned 10-day visit would be a purely private affair...
N-SING: usu supp N
4.
You can describe an object as a particular kind of affair when you want to draw attention to a particular feature, or indicate that it is unusual.
All their beds were distinctive; Mac's was an iron affair with brass knobs...
N-SING: supp N
5.
If two people who are not married to each other have an affair, they have a sexual relationship.
She was having an affair with someone at work.
N-COUNT
6.
You can use affairs to refer to all the important facts or activities that are connected with a particular subject.
He does not want to interfere in the internal affairs of another country...
N-PLURAL: usu supp N
7.
Your affairs are all the matters connected with your life which you consider to be private and normally deal with yourself.
The unexpectedness of my father's death meant that his affairs were not entirely in order.
N-PLURAL: usu poss N
8.
If you say that a decision or situation is someone's affair, you mean that it is their responsibility, and other people should not interfere.
If you wish to make a fool of yourself, that is your affair...
= business
N-SING: poss N