Yes, "cannot" can change to "can't."
No. A contraction cannot be a compound word.
No. "Cannot" is a compound, as it's made up of two words, "can" and "not." "Can't" is a contraction. It doesn't count as a compound because "n't" isn't a word.
No, it is a contraction.
The contraction (not a compound word) is doesn't.
No, "wouldn't" is not a compound word. It is a contraction made up of the words "would" and "not."
Aren't is a contraction, not a compound word.
no it is a contraction
There isn't a compound word (or contraction) for that. Try we + have = we've?
No, you've is a contraction of you, and have.
The contraction "can't" is a language feature that combines the words "cannot" or "can not" into a single word. It is an example of an auxiliary verb contraction, where the helping verb "can" is shortened by removing the "no" or "not" and combining it with the main verb.
No, "Wouldn't " is a contraction.
'She has' are two individual words, not compound; you can make a one word contraction she's meaning she has.