No. Polysemotism is the characterisic of having many meanings, thus, both lay and lays are each mildly polysemous. BTW, the most polysemous word in English is 'set', with more than 20 meanings.
The ostrich lays the biggest but most dinosaurs laid bigger eggs than that.
A whiye egg is normally laid by a chicken.
It takes up to 15 weeks before she lays her eggs.
A Yucca Moth caterpillar eats yucca plants. The adult moth lays her eggs on yucca plants.
In Article V of the Constitution, rules for the relationship between states and the federal government are discussed. It also lays out rules between states.
In Article V of the Constitution, rules for the relationship between states and the federal government are discussed. It also lays out rules between states.
The contrast between these statements sets up Creon as a foil for Oedipus and highlights Oedipus's hamartia
Yes, lays is an action verb. The word lays is the third person, singular, present of the verb to lay (lays, laying, laid); to put or set down; to cause to lie down; to cause to subside; calm or allay; a word for an action.
to represent the duty an obligation of government
Peacocks, which are the males of the species, do not lay eggs. Instead, it is the peahen, the female counterpart, that lays eggs. A peahen typically lays between 3 to 12 eggs per clutch, depending on various factors such as age and environmental conditions. The eggs are usually laid in a nest on the ground.
There are two different verbs: # Transitive (object): to lay - lays - laid - laid - to place something (in a lying position) # Intransitive (no object): to lie - lies - lay - lain
Well when it lays hard eggs is your duck drinking properly?