The word "is" can be contracted to "’s" as in "He's going to the store" (for "He is"). The word "has" can be contracted to "’s" as well, such as in "She's finished her homework" (for "She has"). Both contractions are commonly used in informal speech and writing.
two contractions for the word won't is will and not.
Contractions combining a base word and "not" include aren't (are not), isn't (is not), hasn't (has not), and didn't (did not).
Haven't, didn't.
Hasn`t
She's and He's
18 Contractions Containing the Word "Not"Here are 18 contractions I came up with the word "not" : couldn't shouldn't, wouldn't, can't ,isn't, aren't ,wasn't ,weren't, haven't, hasn't, hadn't, don't, doesn't, mustn't, didn't, mightn't, needn't, and won't.
As far as I know, there is no contractions for the word would. Sorry.
Contralateral
They'd, we'd, who'd and you'd.
using contractions
Contractions are formed when two words are combined to create a shorter word. Examples would be "don't" which is a contraction of the words "do" and "not," the word "can't" which is a contraction of the words "can" and "not," and the word "isn't" which is a contraction of the words "is" and "not." Contractions are considered informal language.
To highlight contractions in Word, you can use the "Find" feature. Press Ctrl + F to open the navigation pane, then type in common contractions (like "don't," "can't," "it's") one at a time. This will highlight each occurrence in the document. Alternatively, you can use the "Advanced Find" option to search for all contractions using wildcards, making it easier to highlight them all at once.