No they are not spelled with an apostrophe.
1. If its is used as a possessive noun, then there is no need for an apostrophe. Example: its name 2. If its is to be used as a contraction of the words it is, the there should be an apostrophe. it is: it's
That is the correct spelling of "apostrophe" (the punctuation mark ' ).
No. (Words such as cant or wont are separate words from their apostrophe forms.) Types of words which cannot be used are abbreviations, prefixes and suffixes. Words that require a hyphen or an apostrophe cannot be played. Words that are only spelled with a capital letter (proper names) cannot be used.
It is not a word. It is two words: "it will". The "i" in "it" is not pronounced, and that is why there is an apostrophe there. You will quite frequently see the letter "t" with an apostrophe in front in Shakespeare, and it always means "it".
A contraction is made of two words with an apostrophe. Note the apostrophe replaces a letter.
Scrabble includes 100 tiles. None of the tiles include an apostrophe. Therefore, words with an apostrophe are not valid Scrabble words.
The riddle for "inexpensive lambs" that rhymes is "cheap sheep."
No, "relatives" does not have an apostrophe. An apostrophe is only used when showing possession or contracting words. For example, "relative's house" or "can't" for "cannot."
what words have 4 letters and an apostrophe
Comprehensive ants?
the answer is: its
It's