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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.
The singular possessive form of the noun "it" is "its". Note that there is no apostrophe in the possessive form of "it". The apostrophe is only used after "it" when used as a contraction of "it is".
The form "somebody's" may be a possessive form or a contraction, depending on use.Examples:I found sombody's watch in the restroom. (possessive, a watch belonging to somebody)Somebody's ringing the doorbell. (contraction for "sombody is")
The homophone for the contraction it's (it is) is its, the possessive pronoun, possessive adjective form of the personal pronoun it.Examples:I think it's time to go.The dog has hurt its paw.You may be referring to the possessive pronoun its and the contraction it's.The possessive form of the personal pronoun it is its.The contraction for the subject pronoun it and the verb is is it's.Examples:The dog is wagging its tail.It's a friendly dog. (It is a friendly dog.)
Yes, "your" is a contraction. It is short for "you are".
The word he's is a singular contraction, not a possessive form.The contraction he's is a shortened form of the pronoun 'he' and the verb 'is'.The contraction he's functions as a subject and verb (or auxiliary verb) in a sentence or a clause.The possessive form of the personal pronoun he is his.Pronouns that function as possessives do not use an apostrophe.Examples:He is my brother. Or: He's my brother. (contraction)The house on the corner is his. (possessive pronoun)His house is on the corner. (possessive adjective)
No, it is the possessive form of the noun. The world's resources.
You can write "will not" as a contraction by combining the two words to form "won't."
No. "Its" is the possessive form of "It". "It's" is a contraction of "It is".
The proper noun form Jon's may be a contraction, or it may be a possessive noun. The contraction can mean "Jon is" or "Jon has."Jon's missing - Jon is missing (contraction)Jon's left town - Jon has left town (contraction)Jon's been married twice - Jon has been married twice (contraction)Jon's car will not start. (possessive, his car)Jon's success came at a price (possessive, his success)
The word "its" does not require an apostrophe when used as a possessive pronoun. Only use "its' " when it is a contraction for "it is" or "it has," and never as a possessive form.
Whose is the possessive form of who. It means "belonging to whom." Who's is also a possessive form of who, but it is a contraction of "who is".The correct form is: Whose turn is it?