You are looking to make a contraction.She would have been here earlier, but traffic was heavy.
She'd have been here earlier, but traffic was heavy.
there is no apostrophe
We would. Apostrophe=woul[d]
I shall with an apostrophe is I'll, same as I will.
An apostrophe would count as a character, but not a letter.
You would = you'd
The apostrophe in "they'd" stands for the missing letters in "they would" or "they had."
there is no apostrophe
It would be he'd. He'll is wrong because that is the apostrophe for he will.
We would. Apostrophe=woul[d]
I shall with an apostrophe is I'll, same as I will.
The contraction or "you would" is you'd. It is also the contraction for the phrase "you had." In either case, the apostrophe goes where the letters were removed.
The contractionI'dcan mean either "I would" or "I had."
An apostrophe would count as a character, but not a letter.
'Are not' becomes ' aren't '. 'Aren't ' becomes further Americanised corruption to 'aint'. These are not good These aren't good. These aint good. ( Not the double negative of 'These aint no good'. It's like saying 'These are not not good'.
Mrs Debase. (no apostrophe) Mrs Debase's handbag. (Possessive apostrophe)
There is not apostrophe in June. But, there would be apostrophe in the following example: June's car was totaled in the accident.
You would = you'd