The contraction for he has is he's, which is the same contraction used for he is. For example, "he's gone away". The same is true for other third-person pronouns: she's is the contraction for both she is and she has, and it's is the contraction for both it isand it has.
The correct grammatical contraction of "I can not" is "I can't".
The grammatical contraction for "have not" is "haven't."
I'm not.The apostrophe substitutes for the 'a' in "am".
Should've is the contraction of should have.
Grammatical contraction ; see relevant link .
"Is not" is abbreviated as "isn't." (The apostrophe stands in place of the letter that has been removed.)
IN PROPER ENGLISH, YOU MUST USE AN AUXILIAR VERB FOR YOU TO NEGATE AN ACTION. IN ORDER FOR YOU TO CONTRACT, YOU CAN USE "DO", DON'T, "DID", DIDN'T, "WILL", WON'T; WE DON'T, WE DIDN'T, WE WON'T, ETC.
Yes, "darting" can be considered a contraction, specifically in the context of informal speech or writing where it may represent the condensed form of "darting around" or similar phrases. However, in standard grammatical terms, "darting" is primarily the present participle of the verb "dart," indicating an action rather than a contraction. In essence, it functions as a verb form rather than a contraction in traditional linguistic definitions.
defination of grammatical weight
A short single contraction is called an acronym. An acronym is a word formed from the first letters of each word in a phrase. For example NASA stands for National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
There is no contraction for were you. There is no contraction for you were.There is a contraction for "you are" (you're).
There is no contraction for "its not."There is a contraction for "it is" (it's).There is a contraction for "is not" (isn't).