It's "I'm lying down." You lie down, you lay something on the table. Lay means to place something down; in other words, it's something you do to something else (as in to lay the blanket on the couch). Lie means to recline or be placed; it is an intransitive verb, because it does not act upon anything or anyone else.
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Depends how you are using it. "Lay down" is a transitive verb; you have to lay something down. "Lay down that pistol" or "Lay down your backpack"
"Lie down" is intransitive. When you say "I'm going to lie down; I'm not feeling well" it's yourself you are putting on the couch. You cannot lie something else down.
Tvv
It is laying in bed
'Laying' is the present participle of 'lay' and as such is a transitive verb. That means that it must have an object, whether stated or implied. For example: 'My hens have been laying very few eggs recently.' 'He was laying the table for dinner a few minutes ago.' 'The president will be laying down her power at the end of her term of office.' 'They are laying odds of 5 to 1 on that horse.' 'The hens are laying well' (the object 'eggs' is understood). 'I'm laying on that horse to win in this race' (the object 'a bet' is understood). 'We are just laying her on the bed till she feels better.' 'Laying' should not be confused with 'lying', which is intransitive. For example: 'She was lying on the bed till she felt better', not 'She was laying on the bed till she felt better.'
Lying down is for a person: You are lying down.Laying down is for an object: You are laying the pen downThere are many such verbs in English, where the transitive form of the verb may resemble the preterite of the intransitive form. For example fall and fell, sit and set, lie and lay. A lumberjack falls down, but he fells trees for a living; he sits down, but he sets his glass down on a table; and he lies down, but he lays his bed on the ground.Confusion between lie/lay may be due to the popular old (scary) nursery rhyme "Now I lay me down to sleep..." in which "me" = myself, and serves as a direct object of the transitive verb lay. This has led to the common error I lay down instead of I lie down.
The correct spelling is "lying down."
Lay, laying, lying, and laid are all verbs.Lay is a present tense transitive verb and is also the past tense of the present tense intransitive verb lie.Laying is the present participle of lay and is used to create the progressive tenses.Lying is the present participle of the verb lie.Laid is the past tense of lay.
"Lying" is appropriate when referring to someone or something in a reclining position. "Laying" is used when placing or putting something down.
You can lay things down, such as tiles on a floor, but if you assume a recumbent position yourself, then you are lying down.
Hold your stylus down when the dogs laying down
You lay something down; you lie down yourself
James Madison talked better lying down...
Yes they can, and in fact a horse can only get REM sleep by laying down.
That depends on the usage. For example, both of these are correct:He had been lying on the sofa for two hours.He was laying his clothes on the sofa while he watched the game.
recostado (for male) recostada (for female)
There is only one correct spelling "laying" (putting down or putting out). It is the gerund form of to lay. The gerund form of to lie (down) is lying.
The correct phrase is "I am just right here lying next to you." "Lying" is used when someone is resting or reclining, while "laying" is the present participle of "to lay," which means to put or place something down.
A river. It falls a waterfall (standing up) and runs lying down.
It is laying in bed