The contraction "won't" is a shortened form of the verb "will" and the adverb "not".
The contraction "won't" functions as a verb or an auxiliary verb.
Example: I will not go today.
Or: I won't go today.
can not
The adjective 'wont' does not need an apostrophe. The adjective describes a something as likely to do something or having a tendency to do something. Example: He is wont to blame others. The noun 'wont' does not need an apostrophe. The noun is a word for a usual habit or way of behaving. Example: He got up early as is his wont.The contraction won't does need an apostrophe, it's a contraction for 'will not'.
Won't is the contraction of will not. According to my dictionary it was first recorded mid-15th century as wynnot, later wonnot (1584) before the modern form emerged 1667.
There is no contraction. The contraction we're means "we are."
There is no contraction for I was. There is a contraction for I am (I'm) and for I have (I've).
can not
The contraction don't means "do not." The past tense is didn't (did not).
Havent: Contraction for "Have Not"
Is
'Doesn't' is a contraction for 'does not'.
Will + not.
Yes, "they're" is a contraction of "they are."
Because you do not know how to correctly write a contraction.
The apostrophe represents the missing letter or letters.
I might know.
It's a contraction of the two words binary digit
Those letters will spell town, wont, and the contraction won't.