Contractions in English

A contraction is a shorter form of one or two words, made by combining them and leaving out some letters. An apostrophe (’) shows where letters are missing. Contractions make speech and writing sound more natural and conversational.

Examples: I am → I’m, You are → You’re, Do not → Don’t

1. Contractions with “To Be”

These are formed by joining the subject with am, is, are.

  • I am → I’m
  • You are → You’re
  • He is → He’s
  • She is → She’s
  • They are → They’re
2. Contractions with “Have”

When have / has is used as a helping verb, we can make contractions:

  • I have → I’ve
  • You have → You’ve
  • We have → We’ve
  • She has → She’s
  • They have → They’ve
3. Contractions with “Will”

We use ’ll to show the future tense.

  • I will → I’ll
  • You will → You’ll
  • He will → He’ll
  • We will → We’ll
  • They will → They’ll
4. Contractions with “Would”

We use ’d for “would.” It can also mean “had” depending on the sentence.

  • I would → I’d
  • You would → You’d
  • He would → He’d
  • We would → We’d
  • They would → They’d
5. Negative Contractions

These are made by joining a verb with “not.”

Common Negative Forms

  • is not → isn’t
  • are not → aren’t
  • was not → wasn’t
  • were not → weren’t
  • do not → don’t

Other Negative Forms

  • does not → doesn’t
  • did not → didn’t
  • cannot → can’t
  • will not → won’t
  • would not → wouldn’t
6. Contractions with “Had” and “Have” in the Past
  • I had finished → I’d finished
  • You had gone → You’d gone
  • He had left → He’d left
  • We had tried → We’d tried
  • They had known → They’d known
7. Informal and Rare Contractions

Some contractions are more casual and used mostly in speech or informal writing.

  • Let us → Let’s
  • Going to → Gonna
  • Want to → Wanna
  • Got to → Gotta
  • Kind of → Kinda

Note: Avoid these in academic or formal writing.

8. Practice Time

Rewrite the following sentences using contractions. Click to see the correct answers.

1. You are my best friend. You’re my best friend.
2. I will see you tomorrow. I’ll see you tomorrow.
3. They are not coming today. They aren’t coming today.
4. She has finished her homework. She’s finished her homework.
5. I would like some coffee. I’d like some coffee.
6. We have been waiting for an hour. We’ve been waiting for an hour.
7. Do not forget your keys. Don’t forget your keys.