The past tense of the verb "saw" is "sawed". However, "saw" can also be the past tense of the verb "see". The verb "saw" depends on context. When you're talking about the cutting tool, the past tense is "sawed". For example, "Yesterday, I sawed the logs for the fire." But when it's about perception, "saw" in the past tense comes from "see". For example, "I saw a movie last night." It's like a linguistic magic trick, one word, two different meanings!
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