Exist.
He did not attend college as he followed the path that God laid before him, that is marriage and family with businesses to run. But, who knows he might go to college when his children are older.
Woodrow Wilson spent 1873-1874 at Davidson College , then laid out for year for health reasons. He entered Princeton in 1875,
laid off
The night before, she laid out her clothes for school.Prior to the 1940s, deceased persons were laid out in their homes for the viewing and funeral. The boxer laid out his opponent with one punch.
The correct term is "laid off."
James Clerk Maxwell graduated from the University of Edinburgh in 1850. He later attended the University of Cambridge, where he was elected a fellow of Trinity College. His education at these institutions laid the foundation for his groundbreaking work in physics and mathematics.
The past tense of lay is "laid"
Yes, Niels Bohr graduated from college. He earned his doctorate in physics from the University of Copenhagen in 1911. His thesis focused on the electron theory of metals, and his work laid the foundation for his later contributions to atomic structure and quantum mechanics.
Yes, Jane Goodall attended Newnham College, Cambridge. She studied zoology and ethology there, which laid the foundation for her groundbreaking research on chimpanzees. Goodall's time at Newnham was instrumental in shaping her future work in primatology and conservation.
George Washington Carver received his education at various institutions including Simpson College, Iowa State Agricultural College (now Iowa State University), and the Tuskegee Institute (now Tuskegee University). He studied agriculture and biology, which laid the foundation for his groundbreaking work in agricultural science.
I laid my book on the table. Laid is a regular verb. The forms are lay laid laid.
I/you/we/they have laid. She/he/it has laid.