What is the contraction word for does not?

What is the contraction word for does not?
Tatiana Ayazo /Shutterstock

English grammar can be super confusing. It’s hard enough to learn all of the rules—and exceptions to the rules—throughout life, but imagine learning English as a second language! There might not be enough note cards in the world to keep track of all the little nuances you have to remember. One of the areas of grammar that can get the most confusing is contractions. Since you’re probably already lost, here are the 20 most confusing rules in the grammar world.

Like many grammar rules in the English language, using “won’t” as the contraction for “will not” doesn’t make a lot of sense. If we formed it like most other contractions, the result would be “willn’t.” Admittedly, that is a bit more difficult to say than “willn’t,” but come on, English language. What’s the deal?

Blame our European ancestors. Centuries ago, the Ye Olde English verb willan (which meant to wish or will) had two forms: wil- for the present tense and wold- for the past tense. But as time went on, the pronunciation of these verbs kept changing, from “wool” to “wel” to “woll” to “ool.” Even though apostrophes and contractions can get confusing, we need them. Here’s how confusing life would be without punctuation.

What is the contraction word for does not?
Tatiana Ayazo /ShutterstockBy the 16th century, there was finally some consensus on the preferred versions of this pesky word. Wil- became the familiar “will,” and wold- became our “would.” But the most popular form of the negative verb became “woll not,” which was contracted to “wonnot,” which modern English turned into “won’t.”

So contracting “will not” the logical way may not be so logical after all. Another thing that isn’t logical? When grammar suddenly changes. Here are some grammar rules that have changed in the last decade.

Did not or does not?

Did is used for past tense. Doesn't is the contracted (short) form of does not. Don't is the contracted form of do not. 1.

Is not or does not?

The easiest answer would say that you use isn't when the question is a question about the third person present singular of the verb to be : Is he here? No, he isn't. You use a form of doesn't or didn't when using does or did the the question: Did it rain last night ?

What is the short form of doesn t?

contraction of does not.

Why do we say won't instead of Willn T?

When we say won't, we are actually saying will not. The form with the apostrophe is a contraction, like “don't” and “can't.” We owe the “o” in won't to a sixteenth-century form of the word: wonnot. You won't find a better farmers market in the city.