ChatterBank2 mins ago
skunk what?
Can anyone tell me what this is all about?:-
"THE SKUNK ROLLED DOWN AND RUPTURED IT'S LARYNX"
And i am being serious, cos i do know!
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.mr. piper, pleeeeeeese don't think i'm trying to be a smartass. There's no apostrophe in "its" - treat this word like his, hers, theirs, ours & leave it out. Only use it to shorten the verb: it is = it's. I teach english to students who were never taught this, & so many people include it every time just in case, & so it spreads ... Your question was really interesting & I enjoyed discovering the answer. I'm also amazed how many people know it!
Well equally not trying to be a smart ass, but "it's" HAS been used correctly.
Johnalex has abbreviated "It is actually a tongue-twister" to "It's actually a tongue-twister." He has not used "it" to indicate possession of the tongue-twister
Do you also encourage your students to proof read their work, to make sure it's correct ;)
You're quite right THECORBYLOON, I hereby apologise to mrs p. It serves me right for putting the sarcastic comment at the end!
In my defence the Xhosa speakers use apostrophes differently to us (I am, of course, now lying).
If we're starting up a 'who has to write the most' debate I have a 90,000 word thesis to submit by October!