Crosswords0 min ago
its and it's
29 Answers
I'm really struggling on this one, but when do you use its and when do you use it's.
I always thought the apostrophe was used when a letter was to be removed (doesn't, isn't etc) and also when it belongs to someone (Peter's cat).
So when exactly do we use its?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.'Fraid not. It's Peter's is short for it is belonging to Peter. It's Peters would mean it is more than one Peter, which makes no sense, unless you're asking someone whose surname is Peters what his/her name is, in which case "It's Peters" would be a perfectly good answer.
Now, where are those damned Anadin?
Now, where are those damned Anadin?
Spot on, Piper-AK. :-)
TheSooze - "it's Peter's" requires an apostrophe in each word - in "it's" because of the abbreviation of "it is", and in "Peter's" because of the abbreviation of "belonging to Peter", but possessives which just use his, hers or its do not take an apostrophe. Put another way:
Peter's = Peter is (Peter's a Gemini), Peter has (Peter's gone out), or belonging to Peter (Peter's car needs petrol).
It's = it is (it's a lovely day) or it has (it's rained all night), but NOT belonging to it (the weather can't make up its mind).
TheSooze - "it's Peter's" requires an apostrophe in each word - in "it's" because of the abbreviation of "it is", and in "Peter's" because of the abbreviation of "belonging to Peter", but possessives which just use his, hers or its do not take an apostrophe. Put another way:
Peter's = Peter is (Peter's a Gemini), Peter has (Peter's gone out), or belonging to Peter (Peter's car needs petrol).
It's = it is (it's a lovely day) or it has (it's rained all night), but NOT belonging to it (the weather can't make up its mind).