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The possessive form of it is "its." Notice that there is no apostrophe. "It's" is a contraction for "it is" or "it has." "Its" without an apostrophe is the possessive form of it. The same holds true for his, hers, ours, and theirs -- none of these have apostrophes.
There is no short form because Video is a short enough word for people to write, so stop being so freaking lazy!
There is no short form to 1942 number. You can write it in words as Nineteen forty two.
Unless "Get" is the name of a person, the word "get" should never have an apostrophe because it does not show possession nor is it a contraction. The present tense form of get is "gets" but that does not have an apostrophe.
Yes, the plural form of apostrophe is "apostrophes".
bcos
"Yo'" has an apostrophe because it is a shortened form of "your". The apostrophe represents the missing letters u and r.
The possessive form of it is "its." Notice that there is no apostrophe. "It's" is a contraction for "it is" or "it has." "Its" without an apostrophe is the possessive form of it. The same holds true for his, hers, ours, and theirs -- none of these have apostrophes.
There is no contraction (no apostrophe is used). The slang short form is kinda.
There is no short form because Video is a short enough word for people to write, so stop being so freaking lazy!
You can write 90 in short word form as ninety.
A short form of two words is a contraction generally written with an apostrophe. "I am" becomes "I'm", "they are" becomes "they're", "where is" becomes "where's"
There is no short form to 1942 number. You can write it in words as Nineteen forty two.
Unless "Get" is the name of a person, the word "get" should never have an apostrophe because it does not show possession nor is it a contraction. The present tense form of get is "gets" but that does not have an apostrophe.
Yes, "Awards Day" does not have an apostrophe. The term is a straightforward plural noun, so no possessive form is needed.
you write it like 1k
Yes, the plural form of apostrophe is "apostrophes".