Neither. The proper construction is "should've seen" (a contraction of should have).
When I saw my saw on the scene, I knew that what I had seen was what I had sawn with my saw.I saw a light ahead.I have seen the light.You did see the movie.Yes, I saw it.I have seen it before.
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").
Either "I have seen that picture," or "I saw that picture."
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 past participle of saw is sawed or sawn. (The past participle of 'see' is 'seen' with the simple past tense being 'saw')
Its Proper To Say I Saw That
I've seen it or I saw it.
When I saw my saw on the scene, I knew that what I had seen was what I had sawn with my saw.I saw a light ahead.I have seen the light.You did see the movie.Yes, I saw it.I have seen it before.
"Saw it"...you can't 'seen' anything
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").
No. There is one word wrong. The sentence should be: I thought of you when I saw it.
You saw it.
Saw
Either "I have seen that picture," or "I saw that picture."
The correct phrasing should be "Did you see her?" instead of "Did you saw her?" The verb "see" is used in the base form after "did." If you're asking about a past encounter, you can clarify by saying, "Yes, I saw her yesterday," or "No, I haven't seen her."
it means that you saw something, the past tence of seen is saw... The past tense of see.
there is a saw 6 ive seen it :)