The correct phrase is "Did you see the film?" Did you see the film is correct. =============================== 'See' is the present tense; 'saw' is the past tense; and 'seen' is the past participle.
Whoever thinks it's the first two, needs to go back to school.. It's ''Did you see the film?''...
Unfortunately no. The correct phrase is "I will see you tomorrow." Alternately, you could say either "I will see you Monday", or "I will see you on Monday" -- with the proper noun "Monday", either is correct. "Tomorrow", however, is not a proper noun and thus "on" must be omitted.
The phrase "made you" can occur in a grammatically correct sentence, yes. We'd have to see the entire sentence to know for sure.
That is the correct spelling of the phrase "my apologies", normally used in the context "you have my apologies" (expressing remorse). (see the related question)
it would be My father was right. as in correct not, write as in writing something down.
Yes. You see, yes or yeah is a one-word phrase.
The correct phrase is "did you see." The auxiliary verb "did" is followed by the base form of the verb "see" in questions in English.
The correct phrase is "I can see in this picture," as it refers to looking inside or within the picture itself.
Yes that's grammatically correct.
We shall set a time for them to meet
No, the correct phrase is "very initiative" is not correct. The correct phrase would be "very proactive" or "very initiative-driven."
I would need to see the specific sentence or phrase to confirm if the grammar and punctuation are correct. Can you provide it for me to review?
Unfortunately no. The correct phrase is "I will see you tomorrow." Alternately, you could say either "I will see you Monday", or "I will see you on Monday" -- with the proper noun "Monday", either is correct. "Tomorrow", however, is not a proper noun and thus "on" must be omitted.
The correct phrase is "Did you see?" as "see" is the base form of the verb used with "did" in a question or negative sentence.
The phrase "made you" can occur in a grammatically correct sentence, yes. We'd have to see the entire sentence to know for sure.
No, the correct sentence is "I look forward to seeing you." This uses the -ing form after "to" to show the action that you are looking forward to.
The phrase seems to be the question, what's that vegetable?(see the related questions)
The correct phrase is "I saw it." "I seen it" is not grammatically correct; "seen" is the past participle form of "see" and is used with a helping verb (e.g., "I have seen it").