No, "laid" is not a noun. It is the past tense and past participle form of the verb "lay," meaning to put or place something down.
Yes, the word "egg" is a noun. It refers to the oval or round object laid by birds, reptiles, fish, or insects, containing the embryo or having nutritive importance in cooking.
The correct term is "laid off."
The past tense of "lay" is "laid."
The present perfect tense of "lay" is "have laid."
The past tense of "lay" is "laid."
The penguin has laid her egg.
Yes, the word "egg" is a noun. It refers to the oval or round object laid by birds, reptiles, fish, or insects, containing the embryo or having nutritive importance in cooking.
The noun 'heap' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a collection of objects laid on top of each other, a pile; a large number or amount; a car that is old and unreliable; a word for a thing. The word 'heap' is also a verb and an adverb.
As a verb: He tried to console the distraught girl.As a noun: The console was laid out so poorly that I couldn't tell the heater from the radio.
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."
The past tense of "lay" is "laid."
Yes, the word 'piles' is a noun; a plural, uncountable noun as a word for hemorrhoids. The word 'piles' is also a countable noun (pile, piles) and a verb (pile, piles, piling, piled). The countable noun 'piles' is a word for heaps of things laid one on another; a word for large strong posts driven into the ground to support a building or other structure. The noun 'pile' is a singular, uncountable noun as a word for the surface texture of carpet or cloth.
The word 'console' is both a verb (console, consoles, consoling, consoled) and a noun (console, consoles).EXAMPLESAs a verb: He tried to console the distraught girl.As a noun: The console was laid out so poorly that I couldn't tell the heater from the radio.
I laid my book on the table. Laid is a regular verb. The forms are lay laid laid.
lay down