this post was submitted on 19 Jan 2025
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It sleeps wherever it's legs give out. His little kitty knees must be powder
Yeah. Can’t be healthy, his head to body ratio is ridiculous.
It’s not just “not healthy.” It’s fuckin animal abuse.
It's very unhealthy, and its owners should be ashamed of themselves
its*
(It's is it is)
"Its knees work hard because it's severely overweight."
It's*
noun, possessive
The cat has knees. It's knees are powder.
From your own source:
"When should you not use a possessive apostrophe? Do not use possessive apostrophes with pronouns, which have their own unique possessive forms."
You wouldn't use he's or she's or they's for possession. It goes: his, hers, theirs, its. The cat's knees = its knees.
Here you go: It's vs its https://www.grammarly.com/blog/commonly-confused-words/its-vs-its/
We both used links from the same source.
I've traditionally used no apostrophe for inanimate objects, like a bus.
But when dealing with a gendered, thinking being, use the apostrophe.
Edit: no need for down-votes for a good-faith discussion, is there?
Downvotes for spreading incorrect information is appropriate.
From the page that you linked:
The nature of the object doesn't change which form to use (which should make it easier to determine which is correct), and the correct form is not a debate.
Sure, language changes, but for now that's the accepted rule.
Awesome! Thanks! I was initially sure the pedant was right, but my grammarly "research" was hasty and misapplied, and I thought I had learned a new thing I was doing wrong. I do a lot of those...
No problem - cheers.
Can't tell if troll or tragically clueless