We write both.Why do we write "its" instead of "it's"?
Neutron Jack said:
Generally, possessive pronouns such as "his", "hers", "ours", and "its" don't use apostrophes.
American said:They should totally change that to "hi's", "her's", and "our's".
I might just do it anyway.
Neutron Jack said:We write both.
it's: the possessive pronoun form of "it", as in "Give the dog its food."
its: a contraction for "it is" or "it has", as in "It's a nice day."
Generally, possessive pronouns such as "his", "hers", "ours", and "its" don't use apostrophes. Contractions such as "don't", "can't", "won't", and "it's" do use apostrophes.
D'oh!Kensington Bailey said:That's wierd - you used the word correctly in the example, but the terms you sought to define are reversed ...
Kensington Bailey said:
Puzzle: what is the definition of ...
its'
Kensington Bailey said:Puzzle: what is the definition of ...
its'
American said:I guess this qualifies as "language history".....
Why do we write "its" instead of "it's"?
Kensington Bailey said:Puzzle: what is the definition of ...
its'
epepke said:See Made in America by Bill Bryson. There was quite a conversy over this one. Thomas Jefferson argued that the posessive should be "it's" to be similar to the use of an apostrophy with the plural of a noun.
Not only is IT a noun, IT is a professional noun.Art Vandelay said:But "it" is not a noun. Why should it follow the same rules as nouns?
The trend these days is away from this sort of construction. We don't put an extra s after the apostrophe in plurals, because saying things like "cheeses's" (admittedly an extreme example, ending in a sibilant in the singular) just sounds clumsy. The obvious exception is irregular plurals, so "belonging to the children" is rendered correctly "the children's".HarryKeogh said:My brother's name full name is Its Keogh
Its' brother is Harry.