In a sea of French-derived af- words — affair, affect, affirm — 'afford' stands apart as genuinely English. It descends from Old English geforðian, meaning 'to further' or 'to accomplish', built on forð ('forth, forward'). The ge- prefix, which marked completed action in Old English, fell away during the Middle English period, leaving a word that coincidentally resembled the Latinate af- pattern but had nothing to do with it. The semantic journey is logical: to afford originally meant to carry something forward to completion, to accomplish it. From there it narrowed to what one could manage or accomplish with one's resources, and by the fifteenth century it had settled into its modern financial sense. The older meaning survives in formal English — 'the window affords a view of the garden' — where afford still means 'to provide' or 'to furnish forth', closer to what the Anglo-Saxons intended.