Either "I have seen that picture," or "I saw that picture."
"Saw that picture" is correct. Use "saw" as the past tense of "see."
The correct phrase is "I saw it." "I seen it" is not grammatically correct; "seen" is the past participle form of "see" and is used with a helping verb (e.g., "I have seen it").
It is correct to say that you saw it.Never say 'you seen it'.If using the word seen, it must be accompanied by the word have or had. I have seen is the present perfect tense and had seen is the past perfect tense.you saw - Affirmative; you did not see - Negative; did you see? - Interrogative.
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.
The past tense of see is saw. The past participle of see is seen.A few examples are listed below:Present / Past / Past participle:see / saw / seengo / went / gonecut / cut / cut
No, the correct form would be "I saw him twice yesterday." Using the past simple tense "saw" instead of "had seen" is more appropriate for describing completed actions in the past.
The correct phrase is "I saw it." "I seen it" is not grammatically correct; "seen" is the past participle form of "see" and is used with a helping verb (e.g., "I have seen it").
"You saw him" would be correct in this context.
It is correct to say that you saw it.Never say 'you seen it'.If using the word seen, it must be accompanied by the word have or had. I have seen is the present perfect tense and had seen is the past perfect tense.you saw - Affirmative; you did not see - Negative; did you see? - Interrogative.
I have / I've just seen you do it. (so none of your variants).
It is incorrect. You may use "You saw him yesterday" as a statement or "You saw him yesterday?", as a question
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.
No. It would be either "you saw" or "you have seen" or "have you seen?" depending on context.
In some varieties, the past tense form is used as a past participle, in place of the different past participle which is used in standard varieties. So this example may be used in some dialects, but it is not grammatical in standard English.
No. There is one word wrong. The sentence should be: I thought of you when I saw it.
The past tense of see is saw. The past participle of see is seen.A few examples are listed below:Present / Past / Past participle:see / saw / seengo / went / gonecut / cut / cut
No. The people who saw it might have seen Mercury. Nibiru does not exist.
The correct grammar is "Gary and Louise saw a deer last week."