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Actually, "it's" is a contraction for "it is" or "it has."
The mark (') used to indicate the omission of one or more letters from a printed word
I prefer American english ..but bending the rules does not negate their existence ..
[edit]Sure enough, it was on Brian's list of errors it's/its [wsu.edu] [/edit]
"Its" is neuter possessive. (possessive, neither masculine nor feminine in gender.)
(@Leosghost)I don't know about rules for variations of english in various countries, so I don't know that we couldn't both be right.
I keep trying to spell possessive wrong, so that's at least a personal one for me. I'm hardly a spelling or grammar expert.
Thus it is it's even when it's the it's you are referring to ..possessive or not
? Didn't we already determine that the possessive form does NOT have an apostrophe?
BTW, the possessive "its" is not quite as big an exception as some think: there are NO instances in which an personal pronoun uses an apostrophe to form a possessive. Other cases: ours, yours, hers, theirs
I don't let it bother me very much, I figure it's just another manifestation of the gonad fixation that seems to be "normal" for the male of the species.