Yes. It is the past tense of "to lie".
vowed: verb: synonyms: promised, pledged, oath vowed: verb: antonyms: lied, fibbed, perjured
Yes. "He lied to you" means "he told you a lie" (both expressions mean the same thing).
The past tense of lie is Lay, as in I lay on the couch. The past tense of the other lie is Lied- I lied about eating my broccoli, while in reality I had fed it to the dog.
Yes, lie is a verb.Examples:Go lie down!You lied to me!Lie is also a noun.Example:You told a lie.
The verb lie means to rest or recline. The three forms of this verb are written below: lie (1st form) lay (2nd form) lain (3rd form) Lie has another meaning which is to present a false impression. Its three forms are written below: lie (1st form) lied (2nd form) lied (3rd form) These are often confused with the verb lay, which means to deposit. Its three forms are as follows: lay (1st form) laid (2nd form) laid (3rd form)
The past tense and the past participle of the verb 'to lie', meaning 'to tell an untruth', are both 'lied': 'I lied when I told you I loved you.' 'I have lied to you ever since we met.' The past tense of the verb 'to lie', meaning 'to be situated', is 'lay', and the past participle is 'lain': 'I lay on a towel on the beach in the sun.' 'I have lain there every day this week.'
The verb for behaviour is behave.Other verbs are behaves, behaving and behaved.Some example sentences are:"I will not behave if I do not get tea"."He behaves like a hyperactive kangaroo"."I am behaving very well today"."She is always well behaved", her mother lied.
Lied. Example: "You lied to me!"
you lied: tu as menti - you lied to me: tu m'as menti
The word 'lie' is both a noun (lie, lies) and a verb (lie, lies, lying, lied).The noun 'lie' is a word for a falsehood.The noun forms of the verb to lie are liar and the gerund, lying.
depends what they lied about.
You Lied was created in 1994.