The best way to use an apostrophe in a sentence is to show possession or to indicate a contraction.
'tis
You can use "tis" in a sentence as a contraction of "it is" or "it has." For example, "Tis the season to be jolly" or "Tis been a long day."
'Tis, I'm assuming you mean, means "it is." The apostrophe shows an omitted letter, in this case it's an I
Yes, 'tis.
Tis the one that is skraight
tieing is a method of attaching the layers of a quilt. not tieing it means that another form of quilting is used. good luck, sewmaterialistic@Yahoo.com
go to the ancient world of tis find the ancient warrior of the tis follow him thru the temple of tis tis go down into the cave of tis and fight the tis monsters get the tis sword enchant it with tis that is how The above answer is false. The tis is actually a lie and not even real. There are only 3 ways to classify latitude. Kill the tis, slay the tis, and destroy the tis.
subject is sister
what is a TIS absconder
The ISBN of 'Tis is 0684865742.
Tis is an archaic contraction of "it is".
A sentence is too general when you use too many pronouns. Tis only applies if it is out of context, though. For example: He knew she was thinking about it. If you hear this sentence by itself, you don't know who he is, who she is, or what it is. If this was in a paragraph, It may be obvious what these things are, but by itself the sentence is very vague.