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who'd
[ hood ]
- contraction of who would:
Who'd have thought it!
who'd
/ ː /
contraction of
- who had or who would
Usage Note
Example Sentences
Morris’ colleagues told detectives he’d been investigating players on the school’s men’s basketball team who’d been accused of sexual misconduct and harassment.
Not every big or baby star who’d appear opposite Jimmy Fallon or Kimmel or Stephen Colbert or even at 12:30 a.m. with Seth Meyers, whose “Late Night” is the last talk show standing in that time slot — “After Midnight” is a game show in which comedians riff off pop culture and social media — is going to show up on YouTube.
In 2009 she published a piece on the Huffington Post in which she explained tongue-in-cheek remarks she’d made in an earlier interview about Katy Perry, who’d topped the Hot 100 the previous year with a different song called “I Kissed a Girl.”
Ken Griffin, one of the billionaire donors who’d convinced themselves that President Trump wouldn’t do some things he campaigned to do, finally got it right last week.
When Lincoln Riley was hired by USC in the fall of 2021, he brought four staffers with him on the plane from Norman, Okla. Among them was Bennie Wylie, who’d spent the previous four years as Riley’s strength and conditioning coach at Oklahoma.
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