There aren't any spaces after the apostrophe in a contraction (did you see what I did?)
Don't leave any space after the apostrophe when forming a contraction.
One space is sufficient.
two should be left
Only one space follows a semicolon.
There are 4
none
None except where the omission is the final letter (the contraction o' for of as in man o' war). The apostrophe goes between the letters of contractions (can't, don't, you'll, li'l) with no spaces.
Don't leave any space after the apostrophe when forming a contraction.
The number of spaces that follow an abbr. is one.
None!
Contrary to what many people believe, the word till is NOT an abbreviated form of the word until; till is in fact the earlier form (pre-dating the word until), though both words are interchangeable. With that said, the word till doesn't have an apostrophe.
There should be one space.
One space follows a period after an initial.
One space is sufficient.
's is used to refer to singular possession.No apostrophe and then an 's' indicates a plural.Be careful about possessive pronouns, though! They're a big exception to the standard English rule that an apostrophe indicates possession. Hers, yours, and especially itscause a lot of confusion because they're among the few possessives that never use an apostrophe. Many people mistakenly use it's as a possessive because of the apostrophe, but it's (!) actually a contraction of it is.
two should be left
"Its" is a possessive pronoun.For example: Its shelter is found under branches and leaves."It's" is a contraction for the words it is.For example: It's a beautiful day.It is very common for people to use these words incorrectly, because many nouns use the apostrophe to indicate the possessive form. But here it is a contraction.One way to remember this is thatthe apostrophe in "it's" is taking the place of the missing I of "it is".