You will see him tomorrow.
No, "I will see you tomorrow" is in future tense. Past tense would be "I saw you yesterday."
If by saw you mean cut a piece of wood by means of a saw (tool), the future tense is:I shall saw, you will saw, he will saw ...
The past tense of "see" is "saw." For example, "I saw a movie yesterday."
The correct present tense form is "I see." This indicates that the action is happening currently.
Saw and Will See
If by saw you mean cut a piece of wood by means of a saw (tool), the future tense is:I shall saw, you will saw, he will saw ...
The correct present tense form is "I see." This indicates that the action is happening currently.
The future tense is 'will see'.
Saw and Will See
Will have seen.
The future tense is will go.I will go to the market tomorrow. (Future)Go to the market and get me some fruit. (Present)I went to the market yesterday. (Past)
I will visit you tomorrow (future) I am visiting you today (present) I visited you yesterday (past).
Saw. Like you saw that bird. I think someone is teasing you, the above refers to the past tense. The future is: 'I will see', 'you will see' etc.
Saw. Like you saw that bird. I think someone is teasing you, the above refers to the past tense. The future is: 'I will see', 'you will see' etc.
Do is present and future tense. Did is past tense. I will do the laundry. I will do the laundry tomorrow. I did the laundry yesterday.
No, "saw" is can be a past tense verb or a noun, depending on the sentence. For example in the sentence, "I saw the most beautiful butterfly yesterday," "saw" is the past tense of the verb, "see". In the sentence, "He used the saw to cut the limb of the tree," "saw" is a noun.
The correct version is "I saw her yesterday."