Every dog has its day.Originally Posted by tdol
Its day = The day belongs to the dog. (no apostrophe)
Cas :D

English Teacher
Every dog has its day.Originally Posted by tdol
Its day = The day belongs to the dog. (no apostrophe)
Cas :D
Absolutely.![]()
so...........
if the dogs do not have "its" day, but some
could we use "it's day"?
You'd say 'their' for the plural.![]()
The word "it's" is never a possessive. "It's" is a contraction of "it is" or "it has". :wink:Originally Posted by Firelord
Pope of the Dictionary.com Forum
thx, Mike~
You're welcome, Firelord. :wink:Originally Posted by Firelord
Pope of the Dictionary.com Forum
Originally Posted by MikeNewYork
Finally, someone who explains it as I do. My students say "It is, its and it's are a bit confusing". I say, " If the word is either possessive or a contraction and the student is really reading the sentence, then you should be able to identify how it is used." Thank you.
miriamg9
Last edited by miriamg9; 20-Jun-2005 at 18:13. Reason: I was distracted.
Thank you, my reasoning exactly.