I have never even heard of using "I'ld", although I may not be the most authoritative source. I guess the point of contractions is to take out letters, though, and it certainly is a contraction of "I would", but I would never use it because it seems more awkward and it is one more letter than the conventionally accepted "I'd". Also, how does this person pronounce it? It seems like it would be very weird, at least with the possible expected pronunciations of /ɪld/, /aʊld/, and /aɪld/. Answer from Deleted User on reddit.com
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YouTube
youtube.com › learn english with emma [engvid]
Speak English Naturally with WOULD contractions: I'D, YOU'D, HE'D... - YouTube
Want to sound more like a native speaker? In this lesson, I will teach you many "would" contractions that native speakers use frequently without thinking abo...
Published   June 15, 2015
Views   665K
Discussions

What's the contraction in "I would" and "I should"?
The owner of it will not be notified. Only the user who asked this question will see who disagreed with this answer. ... I would is I'd. There is no contraction for I should. More on hinative.com
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April 1, 2020
orthography - Contractions: Are “I would’ve” and “I’d have” both equally permissible? - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
Bring the best of human thought and AI automation together at your work. Explore Stack Internal ... I would’ve done something. I’d have done something. ... Pretty much all the contractions of I would have are pronounced /'aydə/, same as Ida. Likewise /'yudə, 'hidə, 'ʃidə, 'widə, 'ðedə/. ... More on english.stackexchange.com
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September 22, 2014
It'd = It would? [Contraction with 'would'] | WordReference Forums
In English grammar Would is often contracted with pronouns in both speaking and writing. I would= I'd You would = You'd He would = He'd She would = She'd We would = We'd They would= They'd What about for the pronoun " it " ? The authors didn't give any examples for " it " in their grammar book. More on forum.wordreference.com
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January 12, 2017
Why is "I'd" a contraction for either "I would" or "I had" but not "I should"?
There's basically never a "fundamental" reason for things like this. The explanation likely has to do with multiple factors: -as one user already mentioned, the "sh" sound is stronger. Another way of thinking of this is that the path of sound change it would take to get from this sound to nothing is longer. -there are good reasons why we wouldn't want to conflate meanings like "would" vs. "should". "Would" and "had" need different verb forms after them so we can distinguish them even if the words themselves are contracted. But "would" and "should" need the same forms, so they'd be indistinguishable. -Things like contraction happen more often with very common words. But "should" is significantly less common in usage than the other two words, so we would expect it to be less subject to those processes. More on reddit.com
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Enchanted Learning
enchantedlearning.com › grammar › contractions › index.shtml
Contractions - Enchanted Learning
March 9, 2006 - A multiple choice worksheet about Contractions for early readers. Words: you’re, we’ll, I’d, won’t, how’ll, haven’t, who’d, I’ve, why’s, when’d. ... Its/It’s Definitions - Comprehension quiz: A printout about the commonly misused words, “its” and “it’s“. There/Their/They're Definitions - Comprehension Quiz · Read the definitions of “there”, “their”, and “they’re” then answer some multiple choice questions for early readers.
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Gymglish
gymglish.com › homepage › online english lessons › grammar rules: learn and improve - gymglish › contractions: 'would' vs 'had'
Contractions: 'would' vs 'had': How and When to Use - Gymglish
The auxiliary verbs would and had are both contracted to 'd. How can they be distinguished? • Would is always followed by a verb in the infinitive without the to: I'd like some sugar please. I would like some sugar please. I'd be glad to meet you. I would be glad to meet you.
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Speakspeak
speakspeak.com › resources › english-grammar-rules › various-grammar-rules › apostrophe-d-had-or-would
‘d = “had” or “would”
May 15, 2018 - The contraction I'd can mean "I would" or "I had". Here are some similar examples: You'd = you would or you had He'd = he would or he had She'd = she would or she had It'd = it would or it had We'd = we would or we had They'd = they would or…
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Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Wikipedia:List_of_English_contractions
Wikipedia:List of English contractions - Wikipedia
This list is part of the internal Wikipedia Manual of Style. For encyclopedic information see English auxiliaries and contractions. This is a list of contractions used in the Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Abbreviations; these are to be avoided anywhere other than in direct quotations in encyclopedic ...
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San Jose State University
sjsu.edu › writingcenter › docs › handouts › Contractions.pdf pdf
Contractions [pdf]
1. I have been studying for hours, but I still do not feel ready for the exam. ... Each of the following sentences contains one or more contraction(s).
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engVid
engvid.com › contractions-for-have-be-would-will
CONTRACTIONS for HAVE, BE, WOULD, WILL: ’d, ’s, ’ve, ’re, ’m, ’ll engVid
2) He sad he’d(would)put it on the table. Do we guess the right meaning only from the context? ... thanks James for this lesson I got 9/10 all ‘Lycan’ tell you is that you ‘rock’ some pokemon jokes from Lycanrock lol. :) ... 8 out of 10 I think that’t not bad. I have a question and it is can you do contraction in all writing?
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HiNative
hinative.com › contraction › what's the contraction ...
What's the contraction in "I would" and "I should"? | HiNative
April 1, 2020 - The owner of it will not be notified. Only the user who asked this question will see who disagreed with this answer. ... I would is I'd. There is no contraction for I should.
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Grammarly
grammarly.com › blog › grammar › contractions
What Are Contractions in Writing? Definition and Examples | Grammarly
August 10, 2022 - Contractions are a kind of abbreviation that combines two or more words by removing certain letters and usually adding an apostrophe. Only certain words can be contracted: typically small and common words (not, is/are), especially pronouns (I, he/she/it, they), and modal verbs (can, will, might, must, should, would, could).
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Cambridge Dictionary
dictionary.cambridge.org › us › grammar › british-grammar › contractions
Contractions - English Grammar Today - Cambridge Dictionary
According to Actual and actually Approximations (around four o’clock) At all Else Hear that, see that However, whatever, whichever, whenever, wherever, whoever It’s time May as well and might as well More or less Of course Point of view ... Apostrophe (’) Apposition Contractions Contrasts Detached impersonal style Internet discourse and text messages It, this and that in paragraphs Paragraphs Punctuation Speech into writing Spelling Such as
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WordReference
forum.wordreference.com › english only › english only
It'd = It would? [Contraction with 'would'] | WordReference Forums
January 12, 2017 - I would= I'd You would = You'd He would = He'd She would = She'd We would = We'd They would= They'd What about for the pronoun " it " ? The authors didn't give any examples for " it " in their grammar book.
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LanguageTool
languagetool.org › home › is it would of or would have?
Is It Would Of or Would Have?
June 12, 2025 - I would of gone to the party, but I got sick. If you read the two example sentences above, you’ll notice that they sound similar. That’s because the contracted form of would have, which is would’ve, sounds very much like would of.
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Ginseng English
ginsengenglish.com › blog › 2016 › 12 › 10 › d-can-be-a-contraction-of-had-or-would
Contractions with Two Meanings | Ginseng English | Learn English
March 23, 2022 - Lots of contractions! Contractions are two words put together in a shorter form. We use lots of contractions in English: isn't (is not) doesn't (does not), didn't (did not), can't (cannot), won't (will not). I'm (I am), you're (you are), we're (we are) . There are tons of them! Confusing con
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Learn English
learnenglish.ecenglish.com › lessons › contractions
Contractions | Learn English
We make contractions by connecting two or more words together. One or more letters are removed from the words when they are connected. ... There would → There'd → "There'd have been more people here if the party had been on the weekend." That had → That'd → "That'd better be the last time she calls me." ... Signup to our newsletter "English in your Inbox" to receive your monthly fix of ...