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dolco
She's wearing a coat VS She is wearing a coat
do the first and second mean "her clothes are a coat" and "she is changing her clothes" respectively?
Jun 12, 2020 12:24 AM
Answers · 5
2
"She's" is a contraction for "she is." Both sentences mean exactly the same thing. The sentences mean, she has a coat (an outer garment) on her upper body.
June 12, 2020
1
They mean the exact same thing. "She's" is simply a contraction or shortened form of "She is." The apostrophe ' symbol in "She's" represents the letter "i" that is in the word "is."
Contractions are used a lot in English. Some common ones are:
don't = do not aren't = are not
won't = will not haven't = have not
can't = cannot it's = it is
And many, many more
June 12, 2020
1
no.
the two sentences are the same.
and they could mean:
1. she has a coat on her (she wears a coat).
2. she is wearing her coat right now.
June 12, 2020
"She's" is a contraction for "she is." Both sentences mean exactly the same thing. The sentences mean, she has a coat (an outer garment) on her upper body.
June 12, 2020
No. They mean the exact same thing. The first one is a conjunction of the second. A conjunction is a just a word used to connect different words in the same clause. Another example is isn’t. It’s the same as “is not”. Even in the previous sentence I used a conjunction when I said “it’s”. It just means it is.
June 12, 2020
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dolco
Language Skills
English, Korean
Learning Language
English
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