It's
The short form or contraction for "it has" is "it's."
There is no contraction (no apostrophe is used). The slang short form is kinda.
Yes, "your" is a contraction. It is short for "you are".
No, "that's" is a contraction of "that is" or "that has," where "is" or "has" is the verb in the sentence.
This'll is a contraction, the short form for - this will.This is a pronoun.Will is a verb.The contraction "this'll" functions as the subject and verb (or auxiliary verb in a sentence or a clause.
The contraction form of "it had" is it'd (it-ud). The same contraction is used for "it would."
There is no "contraction." There is a short form or abbreviated form, which is "mime."
There is no contraction (no apostrophe is used). The slang short form is kinda.
No, the correct form is, "You weren't interested." The contraction wasn't is short for 'was not'. The contraction weren't is short for 'were not'.
Yes, "your" is a contraction. It is short for "you are".
There is no actual contraction (which uses apostrophes). But a shorter form used as a synonym is "kid" (with kids as a short form of children).
No.mustn't is the short form/contraction of must not - mustis a verb
Yes it is a contraction or short form of you (pronoun) and have (verb). = you have
No. We've is a contraction or short form for we have. Have is a verb we is a pronoun
No, "that's" is a contraction of "that is" or "that has," where "is" or "has" is the verb in the sentence.
A short form of two words is a contraction generally written with an apostrophe. "I am" becomes "I'm", "they are" becomes "they're", "where is" becomes "where's"
What've is the short form/contraction of what have.what = pronounhave = verb
"For short" and "short for" mean a shortened form of a word, as an abbreviation or a contraction. For example, the nickname "Deedee" may be short for the Irish name "Deirdre."