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Anonymous Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

Grammar

I don't really know what is the difference between its and it's. whenever i read a text i kinda feel like i get it but im not sure. can someone give me an easy explanation please?
  

Top answer

"It's" is a contraction, which means it is two words put together. The apostrophe indicates that a letter/s has been deleted. It's = it is/ it has It's great.

  • "It's" is a contraction, which means it is two words put together.
  • The apostrophe indicates that a letter/s has been deleted.
  • It's = it is/ it has It's great.
  • = It is great.
  • It's been a year.
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1 Answers
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"It's" is a contraction, which means it is two words put together. The apostrophe indicates that a letter/s has been deleted.

It's = it is/ it has
It's great. = It is great.
It's been a year. = It has been a year.

"Its" is a possessive pronoun like "his" or "my" It is used to show that something belongs to some object, not a person. For example, the dog has a leg. It is b

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