No, seen is the past participle. The simple past tense is saw.
see - saw - seenSaw is the simple past form of the verb see, for example:I saw a good movie last night.Seen is the past participle form of the verb see, for example:I have seen lots of good movies lately; orThis movie has been seen by a lot of people.
Past perfect is formed using - had + past participle.had walked, had seen, had talked, had eaten.Past perfect is often used with past simple to talk about one event in the past that happened before another event in the past. egThe train had leftwhen I arrivedat the station.had left = past perfectarrived = past simple
The simple past is had.
The simple past and past participle are both 'had'.
The simple past and past participle are both brought.
The simple past tense of see is saw: I saw the movie. The past participle is seen: He has not seen the movie.
The simple past tense is saw. The past participle is seen.
Saw is the simple past tense whilst seen is the past participle of the verb "see".
The simple present tense of "saw" is "see" and the past participle is "seen."
The present tense:I/you/we/they see. He/she/it sees.The past tense:saw (simple)seen (past participle)
The past participle is seen. Saw is the simple past tense. See is an irregular verb.
Yes, "saw" is the past tense of the irregular verb "see." This means that "see" changes to "saw" when referring to an action that occurred in the past.
has seen - is present perfect (third person) - he/she/ the doctor has seen had seen - is past perfect (all persons) - he/ she / the doctor / we / they had seen. has seen - present perfect is used to talk about something that happened in the past and is related some way to now. eg He has seen the movie before. had seen - past perfect is used to talk about something that happened in the past before another thing (usually past simple) that happened in the past. eg He had seen the movie when he went to Hamilton.
see - saw - seenSaw is the simple past form of the verb see, for example:I saw a good movie last night.Seen is the past participle form of the verb see, for example:I have seen lots of good movies lately; orThis movie has been seen by a lot of people.
Past perfect is formed using - had + past participle.had walked, had seen, had talked, had eaten.Past perfect is often used with past simple to talk about one event in the past that happened before another event in the past. egThe train had leftwhen I arrivedat the station.had left = past perfectarrived = past simple
The past participle of saw is sawed or sawn. (The past participle of 'see' is 'seen' with the simple past tense being 'saw')
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.