A contraction.
The apostrophe is the punctuation mark used to denote contractions, where one or more letters are omitted from several original words.
An apostrophe is used to show that letters were dropped in a contract. This is known as an apostrophe for contractions, where the omitted letters are replaced by the apostrophe.
An apostrophe ( ' ) - as when cannot becomes can't
An apostrophe is a punctuation mark used to indicate possession or to show where letters have been omitted in contractions. It is also used in some plural forms of numbers and letters.
Contractions make use of the apostrophe. Here is an example: can't.
An apostrophe is a punctuation mark that is used to indicate possession or to show that letters have been omitted in a contraction. In the phrase "For we are," an apostrophe is not needed as there is no ownership or contraction being shown.
There is no apostrophe in wants. He wants to go to bed.Apostrophes are used instead of letters /words) that are omitted. He's got to go. (He has got to go)
The punctuation sign used to show that a letter or letters have been omitted is the apostrophe which looks like this ' example, the word cannot can be made into can't in which an apostrophe replaces the letters no. The phrase I am can be made into I'm, in which an apostrophe replaces the letter a.
Some five letter words with an apostrophe are aren't, that's, and wasn't.
An apostrophe is used to join two words together in a contraction. This punctuation mark replaces one or more letters that have been omitted from a word. For example, "can't" is a contraction of "cannot."
A contraction
Neither. Apostrophes are used to make nouns possessive and to form contractions.