A contraction
The apostrophe in a contraction holds the place of one or more letters omitted from the conjoining of two words.
An apostrophe is something that can be used as a contraction or even a name (e.g)Tom's pencil
An apostrophe (') to indicate the omission of one or more letters in a word, such as gov't for government. Or to indicate the possessive case, such as in woman's.
The apostrophe in O'Neal and O'Sullivan is actually a mark of elision -- an omission of one or more sounds in a word or phrase.
Horsisle answer: An apostrophe is used when one or more letters has been removed from a word, or when two words have been combined; except for the possessive adjective "its". Brought to you by Parasja, brown server
The apostrophe is the punctuation mark used to denote contractions, where one or more letters are omitted from several original words.
A contraction.
The apostrophe in a contraction holds the place of one or more letters omitted from the conjoining of two words.
Yes, there is an apostrophe in "MPs" which stands for "Members of Parliament". The apostrophe is used to indicate the omission of the letters "em" in "Member".
won'tAdditional answerIt's not true to say that won't is in an apostrophe. Apostrophe is the little comma that goes into words where one or more letters have been omitted and won't is the contracted form of will not.^I think they know what an apostrophe is! They were asking what 'will not' was when it was shortened with an apostrophe.
The Gospel of Thomas and many other gospels were ommited from the Bible. Also, the Book of Tobit, the Book of Judith, the Book of Esdras I and II, and many more.
An apostrophe is something that can be used as a contraction or even a name (e.g)Tom's pencil
13 letters. The alphabet consists of 12 latin letters and the apostrophe, called 'okina. Truly, though, there are 18 letters. The 5 vowels with a kahako. See related links for more information.
A contraction in English has one apostrophe that 'replaces' one or more letters. Despair is not a contraction.
An apostrophe (') to indicate the omission of one or more letters in a word, such as gov't for government. Or to indicate the possessive case, such as in woman's.
An apologetic apostrophe is an apostrophe added to a word in the Scots language or dialect to give the appearance of a contraction of an originally English word - for example, the words gi'e (give), ba' (ball), or ca' (call).
The apostrophe in O'Neal and O'Sullivan is actually a mark of elision -- an omission of one or more sounds in a word or phrase.