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What's the difference between 'what's it?' and 'what is it?' in usage

When and where, how often, and so on There is, for instance, this passage Can we go to the beach and collect another one When entertaining a young child who is learning english, i heard some people asking her what is it When pointing to her finger I was surprised because i always learned to ask what is this

You'll need to complete a few actions and gain 15 reputation points before being able to upvote Upvoting indicates when questions and answers are useful What's reputation and how do i get it Instead, you can save this post to reference later. What do you want? is a somewhat normal form of address However, this is a little blunt

If you want to be more polite you should say what would you like? now if someone beats around the bush you can say what is it that you want?, as in a questioning in which a detective asks many questions without really saying what he's got in mind

All right, detective, what is it that you want? I want to know which sentence is correct If i say guess, what it is Or guess, what is it Tell me what, if anything, is inside the box What is it in the box

The speaker of the latter may be a smidgen more confident that there's something in the box, that it isn't an empty box. When you refer to something the listener has, which question is appropriate (what's that?) in my mother tongue, japanese, we use sore (literally meaning "it"). What is it like is usually followed by an infinitive (to play) or a present participle (playing) Grammatically and idiomatically, it almost always works How is it is usually followed by a present participle

Grammatically, it doesn't work as often as what is it like, but people still use it even if it isn't grammatically correct

In casual conversation, it's not a problem to break. What is it about people who want to clone dogs (reference) i'd like to know if what is it about is an idiom I can't understand what it refers to.

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