59

I heard this lyric in a song the other day and it just sounded so wrong that I assumed it must be incorrect grammar, but I can't find any specific prohibition that applies.

That's what it's.

That rolls off your tongue with the grace of a moose in a tutu, but I can't figure out why.

There is clearly no problem with ending other sentences with a contraction. These sound fine.

I thought I could, but I can't.
Stop touching that, it will fall off if you don't.
You say that the sky is green, but it isn't.

Also, it sounds just fine if you remove the contraction:

That's what it is.

So what's up with this construction? Should it be avoided?

4
  • 21
    I think you answered your own question with the moose-tutu analogy. Aug 12, 2010 at 20:56
  • As a member of the community of tutu-wearing meese, I find the innuendo in this question highly offensive! Dec 23, 2016 at 0:49
  • Trigger Warning for Moose Ballerinas
    – JohnFx
    Jan 12, 2017 at 19:00
  • Try reversing it: *What it's is that. It's what it's that's the problem. This is a Wh-cleft, formed from It's that. That's a short sentence with no meaning without gestures and context, and therefore it gets chewed up by the syntactic machinery of clefting. Jun 11 at 18:36

6 Answers 6

72

This is covered in the Cambridge Grammar of the English Language (CGEL), as it turns out, in Chapter 18, “Inflection Morphology and Related Matters”, section 6, “Phonological reduction and liaison”.

The form ’s, representing either has or is, along with ’m (am), ’re (are), ’ve (have), ’ll (will), and ’d (had or would) are called clitics, and they are a variant of what are known as weak forms of words, which are pronunciations of words like a, have, from, you, etc. (about fifty in total) with a reduced vowel, such as schwa.

In the discussion of weak and strong forms, CGEL points out that there are certain grammatical contexts that require strong forms, and one of those contexts is something called stranding, where the object of a phrase is preposed (moved before the phrase). These are examples they give of stranding requiring strong forms:

a. Who did you give it [to __ ]?
b. We’ll help you if we [can __].
c. They want me to resign, but I don’t intend [to __].

In each of these cases, the word in the brackets has a weak form, but it cannot be used in this context because its object has been stranded. Of course, in written English, there is no difference between weak and strong forms—it’s only a spoken difference—but clitics are distinguished in written English, and the restriction on weak forms also extends to clitics. (There are additional restrictions on clitics, but they are not relevant to this discussion).

So, thus we can say that the second is in the sentence It is what it [is __] cannot be reduced to either a weak form or to a clitic because of the restriction to strong forms in cases of syntactic stranding.

6
  • 11
    Excellent answer. W.S.Gilbert deliberately broke the rule for the sake of rhyme, in Ruddigore: "Avoid an existence of crime/Or you'll be as ugly as I'm".
    – Colin Fine
    Aug 9, 2011 at 17:00
  • 1
    I appreciate this answer because I learned something new from it, but I question whether the discussion of weak and strong forms is applicable to using "it's" at the end of a sentence. The premise of the answer is that "it is" at the end of the sentence has a stranded object, but the use of "it is" in the example has meaning precisely because it does *not have an object. Same would be true for "I think therefore I am." (Never "I think therefore I'm.") See OED definition of "be" #1 "Without required complement: to have or take place in the world of fact, to exist, occur, happen."
    – Jonathan
    Jun 7, 2020 at 15:16
  • @Jonathan I don't think the the ises in It is what it [is __] is an example of intransitive be. It is an example of wh-stranding—the what being the wh word which has been stranded.
    – nohat
    Jun 8, 2020 at 17:47
  • @ColinFine I'd say he broke the rule for the sake of humor. The rhyme aspect is just face saving.
    – phoog
    Jul 25 at 11:52
  • In your example b), I find it interesting that "We'll help you if we can't" sounds, to a native speaker, grammatical, even if nonsensical. Or is "can't" not a clitic?
    – AlDante
    Jul 25 at 15:44
7

You can end a sentence with a NEGATIVE contraction (Is he here? No he isn't), but not a POSITIVE one (Is he here? Yes he's).

5
  • 10
    Do you have a source to back that up?
    – IQAndreas
    Jan 7, 2014 at 14:31
  • 1
    @IQAndreas Maybe they would've, if they could've.
    – Laurel
    Jun 16, 2022 at 1:31
  • Or to make what I believe @Laurel's point to be more directly: "could've" seems to be a non-negative contraction that can end a sentence. Also, "o'clock" in "it's 5 o'clock." isn't a negative contraction.
    – M. Justin
    May 3 at 20:45
  • @M.Justin it's not an affirmative contraction either.
    – phoog
    Jul 25 at 11:54
  • @IQAndreas No he doesn't.
    – AlDante
    Jul 25 at 15:45
-1

"It's" is only used when something more follows, you wouldn't use that at the end of a sentence. It sounds like there is something missing if you just say, "it's" or end a sentence with it.

Probably what makes the it's man so funny.

1
  • 1
    I realize that, hence the question about whether it is technically incorrect or just awkward.
    – JohnFx
    Dec 15, 2010 at 15:55
-2

My guess would be that your ear is tripping over the homophone -

its = belonging to it

it's = it is

That's why, when you try the same thing with the other non-homophone contractions, it sounds fine. When you try it with another homophone contraction, look at what happens:

If you want to know if they're crazy, well, they're.

If you want to know if they're crazy, well, they are.

(Typing like Yoda, I am)

Your ear may not recognize whether you're hearing it's or its, they're or their (or there...). So the ear expects another noun. I think that's why it sounds fine with other contractions that aren't homophones. "Can't," "don't," and "isn't" clearly sound like the words they are. "It's" and "they're" are the sources of endless confusion.

3
  • 7
    Ah, but Typing like Yoda, I'm. doesn't sound good, and there is no homophone for "I'm". Or is there? Also notice it sounds okay when I put it in quotes like that at the end of a sentence. This is a very strange phenomenon. Aug 12, 2010 at 21:49
  • 7
    This answer isn't correct; please see nohat's answer.
    – delete
    Sep 5, 2010 at 1:28
  • yep, not right, the "they're" sentence sounds wrong to me to top it off.
    – Claudiu
    Oct 30, 2010 at 2:38
-3

There's nothing wrong with the grammar (in terms of 'prescriptive grammar').

But it "rolls off the tongue" poorly because of its scansion. In particular, people tend to fall into "rhythmic schemes", where short phrases have a certain pattern of stresses. They tend to avoid phrases that don't fit whatever scheme they are currently in. They tend to construct phrases that fit the scheme.

I don't have a reference for this, but it does seem that these patterns don't usually end with stresses when they have an odd number of syllables. So it sounds like there is a word missing.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prosody_(linguistics)

2
  • 1
    Nohat's answer contains: 'In the discussion of weak and strong forms, CGEL points out that there are certain grammatical contexts that require strong forms'. As you don't cite any grammar supporting 'There's nothing wrong with the grammar ...' and there seems a conflict here, I have to downvote. Jul 4, 2017 at 22:27
  • This is demonstrably wrong. These correct forms have an even number of syllables: It's what it is; it is not what it is. These correct forms have an odd number of syllables: It is what it is; it's not what it is. All four of those examples are made into incorrect forms, half with odd syllable counts and half with even, by contracting the last two words into it's.
    – phoog
    Jun 7, 2020 at 15:02
-4

I think we're so preconditioned to expecting a word/phrase after a contraction ("it's" in particular), that it strikes the listener/reader as a rather unexpected/out-of-place stop.

I'm not sure if there's technically anything grammatically wrong with that sort of usage. (Obviously contractions should never be used in formal writing.) Still, I think we all agree it sounds very unnatural.

0

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.