The correct version is "I saw her yesterday."
Yesterday, I saw Goldeneye, an exciting movie. Yesterday I saw the exciting movie Golden-eye.
"Thank you for delivering it to me yesterday"
since yesterday afternoon is correct. since + the point-in-time ; for + time range.
"Did you watch yesterday's match?"
No, the word 'yesterday' is a noun and an adverb.The noun 'yesterday' is a word for a specific time period, a word for a thing.example: Yesterday was the fourth.The noun 'yesterday' is the subject of the sentence.The adverb 'yesterday' modifies a verb as on the day preceding today or recently.example: This is the movie I saw yesterday.The adverb 'yesterday' modifies the verb 'saw'.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.example: This is the movie I saw yesterday. I think you will like it.The pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'movie' in the second sentence.
It is incorrect. You may use "You saw him yesterday" as a statement or "You saw him yesterday?", as a question
Absolutely not correct. You should say "Did you see him yesterday?"
"You saw him" would be correct in this context.
I saw you yesterday. (past tense of to see)The verb seen is the past participle of to see, and uses a helping verb.(I might have seen you yesterday, I could have seen you yesterday)see - present, saw - past, seen - past participle.The past participle is used in present perfect sentences:I have seen the movie three times now.Or past perfect sentences:I had seen the movie before.And other tenses.
Yesterday, I saw Goldeneye, an exciting movie. Yesterday I saw the exciting movie Golden-eye.
"Thank you for delivering it to me yesterday"
No, the correct sentence is "I did not go yesterday." The verb "go" should be in its base form after "did not."
You may be thinking of "I saw Linda yesterday" Dicky Lee-1963
since yesterday afternoon is correct. since + the point-in-time ; for + time range.
The former needs a subject, i.e. I did it yesterday. The latter requires a helping verb and a subject, i.e. I haddone it yesterday. With proper conjugation, they are both correct.
"Yesterday afternoon" is the correct phrase to use. The word "yesterday" refers to a specific day in the past, while "last afternoon" might suggest a more general reference to the previous afternoon.
The correct statement would be: "He went to school yesterday, didn't he?" The use of "didn't he" reflects the past tense of going to school yesterday.