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Let’s is the english cohortative word, meaning “let us” in an exhortation of the group including the speaker to do something Otherwise, know that a basic search will turn up let us in innumerable journal articles, official proclamations, formal invitations, political speeches, and all manner of other speech and writing that would be deemed formal so it's unclear what kind of answer you are looking for. Lets is the third person singular present tense form of the verb let meaning to permit or allow
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In the questioner’s examples, the sentence means to say “product (allows/permits you to) do something awesome”, so the form with lets is correct. The relationship between z and w, on the other hand… Many people use let, let's and lets in conversation what's the difference between them?
I notice that let alone is used in sentences that have a comma
The structure of the sentence is what comes before the comma is some kind of negative statement Right after the comma is let alon. The verb let means “allow”, “permit”, “not prevent or forbid”, “pass, go or come” and it's used with an object and the bare infinitive Are you going to let me drive or not
Let normally occurs with a clause of some sort as complement, and passive is unlikely with a clausal object Bill wants me to come to the party would be passivized to *for me to come to the party is wanted by bill, which is hardly an improvement So let doesn't normally passivize. Syntactically, him is direct object of allow and let, and the semantic (understood) subject of the infinitival clauses
Him is called a 'raised object' since the verb that him relates to syntactically is higher in the constituent structure than the one it relates to semantically.
In let's get started, the starting point is in view and let's get going, you are on the starting point already Moreover, there is a sense of extra involvement abundantly made clear by the sentence, let's start going. 'let bygones be bygones' uses both meanings of the word 'bygones' and means, in extended form, 'let the unpleasantness between us become a thing of the past' So i think, the meaning of the phrase is closer to your first meaning versus the second.