It is "have/has seen".
You have seen is the present perfect tense of you see.
The third person, present perfect tense of see is have seen.
The present perfect of 'come' is have come / has come.Ex: They have come to visit. She has come to see you in your new apartment.
A "regular" conjugation is shown by the word move:Present - I move, you move, we move, they move; he, she it movesPast - movedFuture - will moveAn "irregular" conjugation is shown by the verb see:Present - I see, you see, we see, they see; he, she, it seesPast - sawFuture - will seeThere are other conjugations, such as the "perfect" tenses.- For move, the past participle is moved.The present perfect is have moved or has moved.The past perfect is had moved.The future perfect is will have moved.- For see, the past participle is seen.The present perfect is have seen or has seen.The past perfect is had seen.The future perfect is will have seen.
The present perfect tense is formed with - have/has +past participleFor the verb see the past participle is seen so present perfect would be - have seen or has seenI have seen the movie ten times.
You have seen is the present perfect tense of you see.
The third person, present perfect tense of see is have seen.
The present perfect of 'come' is have come / has come.Ex: They have come to visit. She has come to see you in your new apartment.
The present perfect tense is formed with - have/has +past participleFor the verb see the past participle is seen so present perfect would be -- have seen or has seen.For the subject I we use have seen -- I have seenten movies this week.
A "regular" conjugation is shown by the word move:Present - I move, you move, we move, they move; he, she it movesPast - movedFuture - will moveAn "irregular" conjugation is shown by the verb see:Present - I see, you see, we see, they see; he, she, it seesPast - sawFuture - will seeThere are other conjugations, such as the "perfect" tenses.- For move, the past participle is moved.The present perfect is have moved or has moved.The past perfect is had moved.The future perfect is will have moved.- For see, the past participle is seen.The present perfect is have seen or has seen.The past perfect is had seen.The future perfect is will have seen.
The present perfect tense is formed with - have/has +past participleFor the verb see the past participle is seen so present perfect would be - have seen or has seenI have seen the movie ten times.
The present perfect tenses of the verb 'see' are have seen, has seen.Examples:We have seen this movie. (plural subject)He has seen this movie. (singular subject)
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.
The past perfect tense of see is had seen. Not is an adverb.
sawThe 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.
Answer"Will have been" is the initial structure of the future perfect continuous tense. (See the second answer for its other usage)AnswerNo, it isn't; it's the Future Perfect of the verb TO BE. "Will have been GOING", for instance, is the Present Perfect Continuous of the verb TO GO. Answer"Will have been going" is the future perfect continuous tense. This tense follows this structure: Subject + Auxiliary Verb "Will" + Auxiliary Verb "Have" + Auxiliary Verb "Be" (Been) + Present ParticipleThe present perfect continuous tense follows this structure:Subject + Auxiliary Verb "Have" or "Has" + Auxiliary Verb "Be" (Been) + Present Participle.Thus: the present perfect continuous tense would be "have been going" without the auxiliary verb "will".See the related links for more information.
Saw is the past tense of the verb to see. The present tense of this verb is see, and the present participle is seeing.