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Grammar
Course: Grammar > Unit 6
Lesson 4: Apostrophes and contractionsIntroduction to contractions
Apostrophes are great at standing in for missing letters, allowing us to shorten words. Paige and David discuss contractions and the Principle of Least Effort.
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- What are all the words that can use contractions?(9 votes)
- Here's a full list of...contractible? Is that a word? ..contractible words and their contractions.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:List_of_English_contractions(10 votes)
- Hey, David, Don't makes sense more than won't because Don't is a contraction of "Do not," so, why did you say it sounded that way?(8 votes)
- I'm not David, but I can say, it probably slipped out because it rhymed with won't... Won't is obviously an exception to the general rule... Hope this answer helps (even though you asked about a year ago!!). ;)(14 votes)
- Is the apostrophe at the start of 'cause there because it is a contraction?(10 votes)
- Yes, that's right :)
The apostrophe indicates that some letters have been left out (in this case, the "be-" at the beginning of "because").(8 votes)
- can you end a sentence with a contraction?(7 votes)
- End a question with a contraction? There's no reason you can't. (How's that for an example?)
Here's another example:
"If she'd only have listened, she wouldn't've gotten lost. But she's deaf, so she couldn't've."(8 votes)
- David! Where did the drawings go! Those were awesome, more please! We need those! Like the drawing of the goblin building a sandcastle!🥺☘️(9 votes)
- Take this request to https://support.khanacademy.org/hc/en-us/community/topics where it can be dealt with by the staff. David Rheinstrom finished making these videos by the end of 2016, and hasn't been back in the Grammar course since then.(2 votes)
- when Somebody asks you to take out the trash or do something, could you just say I'll and that be correct. Because I'll means I will.(5 votes)
- Yes. You have given the meaning. Yes, you have been grammatical. Buty, sadly, you've communicated poorly.(8 votes)
- How about words like friends' and 'cause?(5 votes)
- For the word friends' , the apostrophe is indicating a possessive plural here (so something that belongs to several of your friends. "My friends' bikes are all parked behind the school.")
And yes, 'cause is a contraction of "because." You're using an apostrophe in place of the missing letters "be" to shorten the word. Good catch!(6 votes)
- what about she will does it turn in to she'll(4 votes)
- Yes it would since in a contraction you take away word(s) and replace it with a comma. That would be a contraction because you take away the wi in will and replace it with a comma.
Example—>She can’t do a front flip
The “can’t” is a contraction for can not, and in your example it could be like that too. So yeah it does turn into she’ll(1 vote)
- How come cannot is the same as can't and can not?(4 votes)
- why did paige begin the video? isn't that, like, david's thing?(4 votes)
- Variety is healthy, you know.(1 vote)
Video transcript
- [Voiceover] Hello
Grammarians, hello David. - [David] Hello Paige! - [Paige] So today we're
gonna talk about contractions which are another use for
our friend, the apostrophe. So David, what is a contraction? - [David] So something that apostrophes are really good at doing is showing when letters are missing from a word. Right, so let's say we have something like the two word phrase "I will". So in linguistics, I'm
told there's this idea called the principle of least effort, but I'm not a linguist, Paige, you are. What is the principle of least effort? - [Paige] So that's kind
of a fancy way of saying people like to be lazy. - [David] Sure. - [Paige] Which is, you
know, tends to be accurate across language, so you know,
we can say something like "I will", but honestly that kind of takes a lot of effort to say, right? - [David] I have to articulate the mouth in this particular way. It's just easier to just
collapse all of that into one, you know,
one syllable, one sound to say "I'll". And when we do that, we use an apostrophe to indicate the missing letters. That missing "w" sound. That's a contraction. So most model verbs,
right, if you remember model auxiliaries from the verb section. We use those a lot in English. And so it's really easy to combine those with most words or pronouns
into a contraction. So you could take the phrase "she would", which is a lot of letters to say. Takes a lot of letters to write. And we can turn that into, with the help of our friend the apostrophe, the word "she'd" means the same thing. - [Paige] Yeah, that's pretty amazing. I mean this tiny apostrophe
stands in the place of all of these letters. - [David] Yeah it's doing a lot of work. Have I got a deal for your, Paige. How would you like three
letters for the price of four? 'Cause you can shorten, you know, something like "he is" to "he's". - [Paige] Right. Yeah, I mean, that's what the principle we were talking about is all about. Like "he is" isn't that hard to say, but "he's" is a lot easier. - [David] So this is
pretty straightforward, but there are some kind of
strange uses of contractions. Some strange uses of the apostrophe that don't seem as immediately
evident on their face. So for example if you
contract the phrase "will not" into a single contraction, it
doesn't turn into "willn't", it turns into "won't". - [Paige] So in this case the
apostrophe stands in the place of this "o", but all
these letters disappear, and they're kind of unaccounted for. - [David] It's weird, it's
like the Bermuda Triangle of punctuation marks. They all just kind of got
sucked up into that apostrophe. - [Paige] Yeah. - [David] Never to be seen again. - [Paige] Who knows where they went. - [David] But there aren't a ton of those. There's "won't", there's "don't", but not to take away
from our original point. This is what the apostrophe does when it's working to contract. Right, it just takes letters
from the middle of the word, and it takes them away, it stands in for the fact that there
are letters missing. - [Paige] You got it. - [David] Cool. - [Paige] So "I will" goes to "I'll", "She would" becomes "she'd", "He is" becomes "he's", and "will not" becomes "won't". So that's contractions. You can learn anything. - [David] David out. - [Paige] Paige out.