'Had seen' is the past perfect tense.
The present perfect tense would be 'have/has seen'.
No. When you say you have seen something, you are using present perfect tense.
"is' is present tense. For past tense use was or were.
No, have is the present tense. The past tense is had.
Were is past tense.
'Kill' is present tense. The past tense would be 'killed'.
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 is saw.The present tense is:I/You/We/They see.He/She/It seesThe past participle is seen.
"Has seen" is the present perfect tense.
Saw is the past tense of the verb see. The past participle is seen. Saw is also a present tense verb. The past participle is sawed.
Seen is the past participle of the present tense verb see. Saw is the past tense.
The present perfect tense of "see" is "have seen." It is formed by using the present tense of "have" or "has" with the past participle of "see." For example, "I have seen that movie before."
No. When you say you have seen something, you are using present perfect tense.
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
Past tense I had Present tense I have Future Tense I will have
Have is present tense. The past tense is had.
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 'is' is present tense. am/is/are = present tense was/were = past tense