What is the difference between its and it's?

 It's" is always the abbreviation of "it is" as in "It's (= it is) a nice day, isn't it?" "Its" is the possessive of "it" as in, "That is Morton's puppy but I don't know its name." In the second sentence, "its" means "belonging to it".

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"It's" is always the abbreviation of "it is" as in "It's (= it is) a nice day, isn't it?" "Its" is the possessive of "it" as in, "That is Morton's puppy but I don't know its name." In the second sentence, "its" means "belonging to it".

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"It's" is always the abbreviation of "it is" as in "It's (= it is) a nice day, isn't it?" "Its" is the possessive of "it" as in, "That is Morton's puppy but I don't know its name." In the second sentence, "its" means "belonging to it".

cheeeers

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every one has same answer

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 what a coincidence????!!!!!!!!!!

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here is adifferent ans

"It's" is a contraction. A contraction is when a new word is formed from two or more separate words. In English, an apostrophe is used to acknowledge the missing letters. "Don't" is a contraction of "do not," and "shouldn't" is a contraction of "should not." "It's" is short for "it is," or less frequently, for "it has."

Any time "it's" includes an apostrophe, the writer should be able to substitute "it is" or "it has" and have the sentence still make sense. "It's going to be my birthday tomorrow," is correct because it can be changed to "It is going to be my birthday tomorrow." "It's been two hours since I've eaten," can be verified since changing it to "It has been two hours since I've eaten," is still correct.

Therefore, it's easy to get the two words mixed up, because English does not always follow its own rules!

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ya right. because we have taken from the same source

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 U R RIGHT

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ITS NOT CONTRACTION BUT "CONTRADICTION"

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it = it
it's = it is
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