So what is "I seen?"
So what is "I seen?"
Prescriptivists and English teachers might cringe when they see "I seen" (though I'd bet my bottom dollar they've used it more than once in speech) but for the rest of us, this is a pretty common, albeit mostly unnoticed, verb form we use in speech (and maybe someday in writing, too). But what will we call this form grammatically? Obviously it's a participle shortened from the present perfect I have seen/I've seen but when the auxiliary is dropped altogether, is it still in the purest sense the present perfect? Since we still have a myriad of present perfects formed with the auxiliary where it is not dropped (such as where there is no other way to distinguish the simple past from the perfects without the auxiliary), and only a few where it is (seen/done/been), what do we do with this new form? Does this just become marked forever as an irregular verb conjugation: I see, I saw, I seen, I had seen, etc. with margin notes about how the auxiliary is dropped? Or do we develop new terminology for these present perfects where the auxiliary is dropped?
Re: So what is "I seen?"
You'd have to find the semantic context in which it is actually used. So get crackin, get a corpus together mang.
Re: So what is "I seen?"
Oh Lord, I don't want to write a research paper but there are so many ways. AFAIK it is only ever used to refer to the present perfect so it is never a replacement for the simple past I saw.Goatface wrote:You'd have to find the semantic context in which it is actually used. So get crackin, get a corpus together mang.
Re: So what is "I seen?"
whenever i've seen or heard it it has been a replacement for "i saw". analogical levelling and all that (why should we have a distinct participle form for only a few verbs?). i recognize that america may be different, but you know, this sounds like a claim you need to substantiate.
Re: So what is "I seen?"
I know someone who never says "saw", it's always "seen". I also remember her saying "used to could" once.
Re: So what is "I seen?"
"I seen" seems to me a bad way to say/write "I've seen".
Un llapis mai dibuixa sense una mà.
Re: So what is "I seen?"
Well, from a prescriptivist point of view, that's exactly what it is.Izambri wrote:"I seen" seems to me a bad way to say/write "I've seen".
However, I honestly don't think I've ever produced this, nor am I sure I've actually encountered it in the wild from a native speaker. Is it an Americanism?
Salmoneus wrote:(NB Dewrad is behaving like an adult - a petty, sarcastic and uncharitable adult, admittedly, but none the less note the infinitely higher quality of flame)
Re: So what is "I seen?"
I hear it every once in a while (here in the US), even though I do not have it natively myself, and tend to hear I seen as being I've seen but with the /v/ elided.
Dibotahamdn duthma jallni agaynni ra hgitn lakrhmi.
Amuhawr jalla vowa vta hlakrhi hdm duthmi xaja.
Irdro. Irdro. Irdro. Irdro. Irdro. Irdro. Irdro.
Amuhawr jalla vowa vta hlakrhi hdm duthmi xaja.
Irdro. Irdro. Irdro. Irdro. Irdro. Irdro. Irdro.
Re: So what is "I seen?"
I've heard that, and I've even heard /si:nt/, but that's even more rare. It seems to be a regularized past tense form, but 'seen' is taken as the actual underlying root.
Re: So what is "I seen?"
There seem to be a couple of dubious assumptions in Viktor's post:
a. that "I seen" is actually common though held back by "prescriptivists"
b. that any given nonstandard form will eventually be incorporated in the standard
(b) is just wrong; a form can stay nonstandard for centuries, and may disappear rather than achieving respectability.
To decide what exactly "I seen" is doing we'd have to ask a native speaker of a variety that has it.
I wouldn't be shocked if a phonetician told me I wasn't pronouncing the v in fast speech. [vs] is pretty awkward and changing it to [fs] or [s:] isn't surprising. In fact when I try to say it fast, it seems that the /v/ often ends up as a lip gesture that may not have much acoustic impact, though I don't think it gets down to a simple [s].
a. that "I seen" is actually common though held back by "prescriptivists"
b. that any given nonstandard form will eventually be incorporated in the standard
(b) is just wrong; a form can stay nonstandard for centuries, and may disappear rather than achieving respectability.
To decide what exactly "I seen" is doing we'd have to ask a native speaker of a variety that has it.
I wouldn't be shocked if a phonetician told me I wasn't pronouncing the v in fast speech. [vs] is pretty awkward and changing it to [fs] or [s:] isn't surprising. In fact when I try to say it fast, it seems that the /v/ often ends up as a lip gesture that may not have much acoustic impact, though I don't think it gets down to a simple [s].
Re: So what is "I seen?"
It is not always simply a case of eliding /v/ in quick speech though, which I'm pretty sure a lot of us do, even if we don't realize it. For people like the friend I mentioned, "I seen" has entirely replaced "I saw" as the simple past tense. This is pretty obvious because she uses "I seen" in places where present perfect would be unnatural, e.g. "I seen him yesterday." Also, this only occurs for "see" and is not a universal rule of past participle replacing past tense (for instance, she doesn't say "I eaten").
Re: So what is "I seen?"
No, it's very common in Scotland too.Dewrad wrote:Well, from a prescriptivist point of view, that's exactly what it is.Izambri wrote:"I seen" seems to me a bad way to say/write "I've seen".
However, I honestly don't think I've ever produced this, nor am I sure I've actually encountered it in the wild from a native speaker. Is it an Americanism?
Other examples include "I've went".
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Re: So what is "I seen?"
I don't have it, but my father did - he was full of ruralisms, eggcorns, and odd turns of phrase - and I grew up finding it funny but not strange. After I had gained some knowledge of linguistics I started paying more attention, and at one time I had a list going in my head of things he'd said. I wish I'd written them down. But it was clear to me that he had three distinct forms, "see", "seen", and "have seen", which as far as I could tell occurred exactly where you'd expect "see", "saw", and "have seen" respectively.
And at least for him, dropping [v] before [s] would not explain many of the things he said where there was other material between - "I just seen it", things like that.
And at least for him, dropping [v] before [s] would not explain many of the things he said where there was other material between - "I just seen it", things like that.
Re: So what is "I seen?"
it could be that "I have seen" is being reanalyzed solely as an emphatic form like "I did see". Did he ever say "I did seen it"? "Done seen it"?Radius Solis wrote:But it was clear to me that he had three distinct forms, "see", "seen", and "have seen", which as far as I could tell occurred exactly where you'd expect "see", "saw", and "have seen" respectively.
Where did "gone" go? Or "did"? And is this emphatic or simple past?finlay wrote:No, it's very common in Scotland too.Other examples include "I've went".Dewrad wrote:Is it an Americanism?Izambri wrote:"I seen" seems to me a bad way to say/write "I've seen".
Last edited by Melteor on Fri Feb 15, 2013 11:26 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Re: So what is "I seen?"
These are nothing more than regularization of the verbs from three distinct forms to two:
see - saw - seen
see - seen - seen
go - went - gone
go - went - went
This makes them analogous to regular verbs, e.g.
talk - talked - talked
It's facilitated by the fact that the past tense and past participles have the same number of syllables (unlike eat - ate - eaten)
Some verbs are in transition, and both are considered correct, e.g. prove - proved - proven/proved
Some verbs have completed the transition, and the past participle is now considered archaic and/or specialized:
work - worked - wrought
work - worked - worked
melt - melted - molten
melt - melted - melted
Then there's also get - got - got/gotten, which is a mess. I use both "got" and "gotten" as past participles, depending on the meaning. When it is equivalent to "have" I use got, e.g. "I've got $20," or "You've got to stop doing that," but otherwise I use "gotten", e.g. "I've gotten used to it."
see - saw - seen
go - went - gone
This makes them analogous to regular verbs, e.g.
talk - talked - talked
It's facilitated by the fact that the past tense and past participles have the same number of syllables (unlike eat - ate - eaten)
Some verbs are in transition, and both are considered correct, e.g. prove - proved - proven/proved
Some verbs have completed the transition, and the past participle is now considered archaic and/or specialized:
work - worked - wrought
melt - melted - molten
Then there's also get - got - got/gotten, which is a mess. I use both "got" and "gotten" as past participles, depending on the meaning. When it is equivalent to "have" I use got, e.g. "I've got $20," or "You've got to stop doing that," but otherwise I use "gotten", e.g. "I've gotten used to it."
Re: So what is "I seen?"
I didn't at all mean to suggest that eliding the v is what everyone does.Radius Solis wrote:And at least for him, dropping [v] before [s] would not explain many of the things he said where there was other material between - "I just seen it", things like that.
Re: So what is "I seen?"
Ok, this makes the most sense. And this supports my belief that "seen" will become a regularised form of speech. If we can regularise wrought (although this is somewhat inaccurate as wrought is truly the participle of wreak but nonetheless the point stands), and we certainly did that within the last two centuries, then I see no reason to reject "seen" here. Unlike "gone" and "been" where there is perhaps more of a resistance since they are more commonly used verbs, "seen" goes unnoticed. I hear it all the time, and if I'm not watching myself I use it, too. Of course this is 100% conjecture because I have no way of substantiating it, but I would bet that "seen" in this form will be commonplace and accepted within this century.clawgrip wrote:These are nothing more than regularization of the verbs from three distinct forms to two:
see - saw - seensee - seen - seen
go - went - gonego - went - went
This makes them analogous to regular verbs, e.g.
talk - talked - talked
It's facilitated by the fact that the past tense and past participles have the same number of syllables (unlike eat - ate - eaten)
Some verbs are in transition, and both are considered correct, e.g. prove - proved - proven/proved
Some verbs have completed the transition, and the past participle is now considered archaic and/or specialized:
work - worked - wroughtwork - worked - worked
melt - melted - moltenmelt - melted - melted
Then there's also get - got - got/gotten, which is a mess. I use both "got" and "gotten" as past participles, depending on the meaning. When it is equivalent to "have" I use got, e.g. "I've got $20," or "You've got to stop doing that," but otherwise I use "gotten", e.g. "I've gotten used to it."
This makes more sense too, leaving the auxiliary in place, so it works well within the confines of English grammar.
Last edited by Viktor77 on Sat Feb 16, 2013 12:53 am, edited 2 times in total.
Re: So what is "I seen?"
My partner's father is the exact same way. I always thought it odd because my partner doesn't reserve any of his ruralisms in his speech, nor do his sisters, nor his wife, it's uniquely him, and it's just bizarre. It even extends to his pronunciation, but none of it extends to his children.Radius Solis wrote:I don't have it, but my father did - he was full of ruralisms, eggcorns, and odd turns of phrase - and I grew up finding it funny but not strange. After I had gained some knowledge of linguistics I started paying more attention, and at one time I had a list going in my head of things he'd said. I wish I'd written them down. But it was clear to me that he had three distinct forms, "see", "seen", and "have seen", which as far as I could tell occurred exactly where you'd expect "see", "saw", and "have seen" respectively.
Re: So what is "I seen?"
Actually wrought is the past participle of work. Wrought iron, for example, is iron that someone has produced through metalworking, not by inflicting vengeance. However, both work and wreak originally come from the same root.Viktor77 wrote:Ok, this makes the most sense. And this supports my belief that "seen" will become a regularised form of speech. If we can regularise wrought (although this is somewhat inaccurate as wrought is truly the participle of wreak but nonetheless the point stands), and we certainly did that within the last two centuries, then I see no reason to reject "seen" here. Unlike "gone" and "been" where there is perhaps more of a resistance since they are more commonly used verbs, "seen" goes unnoticed. I hear it all the time, and if I'm not watching myself I use it, too. Of course this is 100% conjecture because I have no way of substantiating it, but I would bet that "seen" in this form will be commonplace and accepted within this century.
This makes more sense too, leaving the auxiliary in place, so it works well within the confines of English grammar.
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Re: So what is "I seen?"
Not something I would ever, ever say.
Only thing I can think of is Northern. c.f. Alan Shearer's trouble trying to remember to say "what they did" rather than "what they done" - pretty sure I've heard a "what they seen" from him at some point.
Only thing I can think of is Northern. c.f. Alan Shearer's trouble trying to remember to say "what they did" rather than "what they done" - pretty sure I've heard a "what they seen" from him at some point.
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But the river tripped on her by and by, lapping
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I'se so silly to be flowing but I no canna stay!
But the river tripped on her by and by, lapping
as though her heart was brook: Why, why, why! Weh, O weh
I'se so silly to be flowing but I no canna stay!
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Re: So what is "I seen?"
Kids don't (usually) learn their language habits from their parents Vikky, they learn it from their friends.Viktor77 wrote:My partner's father is the exact same way. I always thought it odd because my partner doesn't reserve any of his ruralisms in his speech, nor do his sisters, nor his wife, it's uniquely him, and it's just bizarre. It even extends to his pronunciation, but none of it extends to his children.Radius Solis wrote:I don't have it, but my father did - he was full of ruralisms, eggcorns, and odd turns of phrase - and I grew up finding it funny but not strange. After I had gained some knowledge of linguistics I started paying more attention, and at one time I had a list going in my head of things he'd said. I wish I'd written them down. But it was clear to me that he had three distinct forms, "see", "seen", and "have seen", which as far as I could tell occurred exactly where you'd expect "see", "saw", and "have seen" respectively.
Shocking!Salmoneus wrote:Not something I would ever, ever say.
Re: So what is "I seen?"
This construction is common here in Oregon--it simply equates to "I saw." But it's distinctly associated with a low level of education. I'm surprised to hear that your teachers, and you even, use it.Viktor77 wrote:Prescriptivists and English teachers might cringe when they see "I seen" (though I'd bet my bottom dollar they've used it more than once in speech) but for the rest of us, this is a pretty common, albeit mostly unnoticed, verb form we use in speech (and maybe someday in writing, too).
I've become quite fond of these SAE auxiliary chains, like "might could," "might should" and use them rather often.clawgrip wrote:I also remember her saying "used to could" once.
Re: So what is "I seen?"
Yes, and "What hath God wrought?", the first message sent through the telegraph = "What has God worked?"clawgrip wrote:Actually wrought is the past participle of work. Wrought iron, for example, is iron that someone has produced through metalworking, not by inflicting vengeance. .
Re: So what is "I seen?"
Yes. What hath God "1. Put together; created, e.g. a carefully wrought plan."Shm Jay wrote:Yes, and "What hath God wrought?", the first message sent through the telegraph = "What has God worked?"clawgrip wrote:Actually wrought is the past participle of work. Wrought iron, for example, is iron that someone has produced through metalworking, not by inflicting vengeance. .
I'm not sure why you're arguing this. Try looking it up.
Re: So what is "I seen?"
I'm not arguing it; I'm agreeing with you and giving everyone a famous example of its usage.




