meobeo
Junior Member
- Joined
- Aug 5, 2010
- Member Type
- Interested in Language
- Native Language
- Vietnamese
- Home Country
- Vietnam
- Current Location
- Australia
"It's nothing to do with you" is an expression I come across a good deal when watching films and soap operas in English. Its meaning, if I'm not mistaken, is equal to "It's none of your business". What I don't yet grasp is what "It's" stands for. My instinct tells me that it's the short form of "It has" because we can say something like: "I have nothing to do with the robbery". But it still troubles me somehow because normally we either say "He has..." or "He's got..." in Br.E. I don't think anyone would ever say "He's a car." to mean that "He's got a car." That's why if "It's" is the short form of "It has", it will be really weird to me. Is it an exception of using "It's" as "It has" or are there other instances in which this short form may be used? Thanks for any explanation!