“It isn’t” or “It’s not”

“It isn’t” or “It’s not”

  • It’s not

    Votes: 23 67.6%
  • It isn’t

    Votes: 11 32.4%

  • Total voters
    34
  • Poll closed .
They're both correct contractions. One of them might feel awkward in a sentence depending on use, but they are more or less equal in formality and correctness. Both of these contractions are used commonly even in formal speech- like a business meeting, court of law, or a news broadcast- so the version without contraction "It is not" will sound either very formal or be used for emphasis. I would not use "it is not" in translation unless a character was vehemently disputing something or if I wanted to give a sense of a different time (formal historical speaking). Even an upset person is very likely to say "No, it's not!" Or "No it isn't!" rather than "It is not!"
 
It isn't true that it's not wrong when it isn't wrong while it's not true.


(It's not like I know if that statement isn't wrong)
(English. It isn't my native language. It's not even my second language!)
 
i thought it's the matter of emphasis or something like that. well, i'm not that well-versed on english, i really thought there's a reason for each
 
@greenfrost
What about "tis not"?

Sounds too much like "this snot"

tenor.gif

It's not the year for snot.
 

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