Only one sentence is correct. The correct sentence would be "He saw me going there".
'They are going sightseeing' or 'They are going to go sightseeing' are acceptable forms.
When are you going to go? the correct use of those words is: when are you going.
The correct version is "I saw her yesterday."
"We are going in the car" - means we are now going in the car"We are going to go in the car" - means we will go in the car (future)It is optional to say "we are going into the car", but it sounds more correct to me.
this is correct one 'you saw it turning back'
No, it makes no sense in English.Here are some correct sentences:Mother and I are going shoppingMother and I will go shoppingI am going shopping with my motherI and my mother are going shoppingMy mother and I are going shopping
Either "I have seen that picture," or "I saw that picture."
It is a subject pronoun. We saw the doctor. - used in subject position = correct The doctor saw we. - used in object position = not correct
They are going is correct.
I'm going to go with... the inventor of the plane.
"You saw him" would be correct in this context.
It depends on the context. "He saw" is the correct past tense form, while "he see" is not grammatically correct in standard English.