Aaaaaa the misuse of SEEN for SAW – let’s end it, right here, right now!
But, first, a review of verb tenses:
- Present (states an action that is happening now or that happens regularly): I see, you see, he/she/it sees, we see, you see, they see
- Past (states an action that happened at a specific time in the past): I saw, you saw, he/she/it saw, we saw, you saw, they saw
- Future (states an action that will take place): I shall see, you will see, he/she/it will see, we shall see, you will see, they will see
- Present Perfect (states an action that began in the past and is still going on. Add has or have): I have seen, you have seen, he/she/it has seen, we have seen, you have seen, they have seen
- Past Perfect (states an action began and was completed in the past. Add had): I had seen, you had seen, he/she/it had seen, we had seen, you had seen, they had seen
- Future Perfect (states an action that will begin in the future and end at a specific time in the future. Add will have): I shall have seen, you will have seen, he/she/it will have seen, we shall have seen, you will have seen, they will have seen
What we hear way too much:
- I seen that movie last week at the theatre.
- Betty seen her cousin at the Winter Carnival last February.
- Did you know we seen some seals off the beach in September?
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa – here’s the easy RULE:
Use SAW ONLY when you are speaking or writing in the PAST TENSE and when HAS, HAVE or HAD is NOT a part of the verb.
- Example: I SAW the hockey game last weekend.
The hockey game obviously happened in the past (last weekend) and HAS, HAVE, or HAD is not a part of the verb.
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa – here’s the easy RULE:
Use SEEN ONLY when you are using HAS, HAVE, or HAD as part of the verb.
- Example: Bob HAD SEEN that TV program several times by the time Tom saw it.
SEEN is correct because HAD is part of the verb.
Some sentences for you to try:
- Ivan (saw, seen) his four-wheeler used as a float in the parade.
- I never (saw, seen) such a big brown bear!
- Have you (saw, seen) the pelmini made at Katya’s house this week?
- Alexander (saw, seen) his sister’s purse hanging on the back of the chair.
- Mr. Miller had (saw, seen) many apples disappear from his desk until he decided to catch the culprit.