The contraction "there's" is formed by combining "there" and "is." It is commonly used in English to indicate the existence of something or to introduce a statement. For example, "There's a cat on the roof" means "There is a cat on the roof." This contraction simplifies speech and writing, making it more fluid.
108 degrees can be expressed in shortened form as 108°.
The shortened form of "approximately" is "approx." It is commonly used in writing and calculations to indicate that a value is not exact but close to a specified amount.
No, it is a noun. It is a shortened form of the noun "mathematics."
1 and 451 thousandths.
her real name was clarrissa but they shortened it
The shortened version of 'it has' is 'it's'.
The shortened version of 'it has' is 'it's'.
It is shortened for give.
hello shortened is ''hi''
they (ha)ve is shortened to the contraction they've.
'You have' is not a shortened form of anything. It has a shortened form, 'you've'.
The shortened name for oxygen is O2.
The shortened form for 'superintendent' is 'supt.'
Daren't is shortened from dare not .
Here are some examples:I am (full version) - I'm (shortened version)you are (full version) - you're (shortened version)he is (full version) - he's (shortened version)we are (full version) - we're (shortened version)must not (full version) - mustn't (shortened version)do not (full version) - don't (shortened version; in speech the vowel is different too)will not (full version) - won't (shortened; again there is a vowel change in speech)has not (full version) - hasn't (shortened version)
Christopher Katherine shortened to Kitty shortened to Kit
it has shortened the travel time. it has shortened the travel time.