Ah! English usage, another bit of pedantry from me I'm afraid.

Is your quote a copy and paste? Either way the English is bad, it 
should be "is that formed", there is only one category being 
described.

I'll go back to sleep now.

BCNU
David Crowe

--- In [email protected], "Ron Jones" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> listz1 wrote:
> > Thank you for that ,
> > so why isn't it " woln't " or even " wo'n't "  ?
> >
> > grayham
> > Beginning to regret asking lol
> 
> I think double apostrophes are very rare - I only know of one (a 
boating one 
> at that - Foc's'le)
> and I suspect word corruption was more so very long ago (after all 
who could 
> even write?) - one reference I found put won't "sometime before 
1380"
> I also found this nice quote "The first category of contractions 
is those 
> formed by an auxiliary verb or form of be plus the word not, with 
the o 
> replaced by an apostrophe, e.g. don't, can't, wouldn't, haven't. 
Notable 
> exceptions include won't, shan't and ain't. "
> 
> Ron Jones
> Process Safety & Development Specialist
> Don't repeat history, unreported chemical lab/plant near misses at
> http://www.crhf.org.uk Only two things are certain: The universe 
and
> human stupidity; and I'm not certain about the universe. ~ Albert
> Einstein
>


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