I have not seen your message.
The past tense of "I have not seen your message" is "I had not seen your message."
The past perfect tense of "not see" is "had not seen."
The past participle tense of "see" is "seen."
The tense "has seen" is in the present perfect tense. It is formed by combining the present tense of the auxiliary verb "has" with the past participle "seen" of the main verb.
The past tense of "see" is "saw" and the past participle is "seen."
The past tense of see is saw, the present tense is see, and the past participle is seen.
"Seen" is a past participle form of the verb "see." It is typically used in perfect tenses (e.g., she has seen) or as part of passive forms (e.g., the movie was seen by many people).
The tense "has seen" is in the present perfect tense. It is formed by combining the present tense of the auxiliary verb "has" with the past participle "seen" of the main verb.
"Seen" is already the past participle of "see", and the past tense of "see" is "saw".
'Had seen' is the past perfect tense.The present perfect tense would be 'have/has seen'.
Seen in is not tense. The verb seen is the past participle of see but a past participle by itself does not make a tense.have/has seen = present perfecthad seen = past perfectwas seen = passive
Saw is the simple past tense whilst seen is the past participle of the verb "see".
the past tense of "you see it" is "you saw it".The past simple tense of 'see' is saw.The past perfect tense is had seen.The present perfect tense is have seen, and this form links the past and the present.The common misconception is that many people believe "seen" is the past tense, whereas it is not.
No, seen is the past participle. The simple past tense is saw.
Seen is the past participle of see See- saw- seen
sawThe past simple tense of 'see' is saw.The past perfect tense is had seen.The present perfect tense is have seen, and this form links the past and the present.The common misconception is that many people believe "seen" is the past tense, whereas it is not.
The present perfect tense is formed with - have/has +past participleFor the verb see the past participle is seen so present perfect would be - have seen or has seenI have seen the movie ten times.
The phrase "is you seen" is not proper English grammar. It appears to be a grammatical error, as "is" is the present tense form of the verb "to be" and "seen" is the past participle form of "see." A correct phrasing could be "have you seen?" or "did you see?" depending on the context.