Why does wont have an apostrophe
April 6, at am Graham. How did you get to wonnot from wol not? March 21, at am Jason. April 7, at pm Monica. Thank you. May 2, at pm April. March 1, at am burko. I walnut! March 15, at pm Stacey. What is wrong with you people? Your spelling mistakes and poor grammar are ridiculous! September 5, at am Jacqueline A. November 22, at pm LC.
March 3, at am Michael A. September 25, at pm Miq Mils. So much for paragraphs. Leave a Reply Cancel reply Enter your comment here Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. Email required Address never made public.
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Skip to content. How to use the apostrophe By Marina Pantcheva The apostrophe has two functions: it marks possession, and it is used in contractions to indicate the place where the letters have been omitted. Leave a Reply Cancel reply Your email address will not be published.
Proudly powered by WordPress. It is not wrong to use such contractions in formal writing, but you should use them sparingly, since they tend to make your writing appear less than fully formal. Since I'm trying to make this document seem chatty rather than intimidating, I've been using a few contractions here and there, though not as many as I might have used. But I advise you not to use the more colloquial contractions like she'd've in your formal writing: these things, while perfectly normal in speech, are a little too informal for careful writing.
Such contractions represent the most useful job the apostrophe does for us, since, without it, we would have no way of expressing in writing the difference between she'll and shell , he'll and hell , can't and cant , I'll and ill , we're and were , she'd and shed , we'll and well , and perhaps a few others. A few words which were contractions long ago are still conventionally written with apostrophes, even though the longer forms have more or less dropped out of use.
There are so few of these that you can easily learn them all. Here are the commonest ones, with their original longer forms: o'clock of the clock Hallowe'en Halloweven fo'c's'le forecastle cat-o'-nine-tails cat-of-nine-tails ne'er-do-well never-do-well will-o'-the-wisp will-of-the-wisp Some generations ago there were rather more contractions in regular use in English; these other contractions are now archaic, and you wouldn't normally use any of them except in direct quotations from older written work.
Each entry starts with a simple explanation and some basic examples before giving real-life, entertaining examples. Every entry ends with a summary explaining why the grammar point matters to a writer. If you like Grammar Monster, you'll love this book. Practical rather than academic, this best seller is packed with real-life examples and great quotations from Homer the Greek to Homer the Simpson.
It is a light-hearted, easily digestible grammar reference.
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