Would and not; would not
will not
The contraction of "will not" is "won't" because in English, contractions are formed by combining certain letters from the original words. In this case, the "i" and "ll" in "will" are removed and replaced with an apostrophe to form "won't."
It means that that the person who said it thinks that you wont do anything or are weak and that your all talk, you'll say anything u want and maybe even threaten but you wont do anything to them
In some dialects, "wont," not to be confused with "won't."
The homophone for habit is rabbit.
will not
The contraction of "will not" is "won't" because in English, contractions are formed by combining certain letters from the original words. In this case, the "i" and "ll" in "will" are removed and replaced with an apostrophe to form "won't."
Won't is the contraction of will not. According to my dictionary it was first recorded mid-15th century as wynnot, later wonnot (1584) before the modern form emerged 1667.
Because you do not know how to correctly write a contraction.
Those letters will spell town, wont, and the contraction won't.
The adjective 'wont' does not need an apostrophe. The adjective describes a something as likely to do something or having a tendency to do something. Example: He is wont to blame others. The noun 'wont' does not need an apostrophe. The noun is a word for a usual habit or way of behaving. Example: He got up early as is his wont.The contraction won't does need an apostrophe, it's a contraction for 'will not'.
it makes the cookie.if you don't have that it wont be a cookie
articat atv366 wont start makes a cliking noise has good battery
so it wont rot and makes it cool
wont answer my question
because if they wont be the same then we wont get the right data
munipulative