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Re: It's vs. it is

From:Matt Pearson <pearson@...>
Date:Tuesday, April 17, 2001, 1:13
David Peterson wrote:

> In a message dated 4/16/01 12:20:07 PM, tb0pwd1@CORN.CSO.NIU.EDU writes: > > << Metrics. In the sentence, "I don't know what it is," the accent falls on > "is," so "is" cannot be elided. But in the sentence "It's what I want," > the accent falls on "what," so "is" can be contracted. >> > > That's not exactly correct. After all, you could put the stress on "I" > indicating it's you who wants it and not someone else and you could still say > "it's" in the beginning. You could put the stress on anything, in fact, and > you could only contract things in the subject position.
What do you mean by "subject position"? "Is" is not--and cannot be--a subject. If what you mean is that "is" can be contracted when it follows a subject, then your rule doesn't work: In the sentence "I don't know what it is", "it" is the subject of the embedded clause. Matt.

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Patrick Dunn <tb0pwd1@...>