Yes, lie is a verb.
Examples:
Go lie down!
You lied to me!
Lie is also a noun.
Example:
You told a lie.
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.
I/you/we/they lie. He/she/it lies. The present participle is lying.
if you mean lie as in tell a lie, its "ljuga" or "lögn", where 'lögn' is the substantive and 'ljuga' is the verb.
As a noun: He told a lie when he said he loves me.As a verb: I had to lie down after that hectic morning.
The verb form of "lie" is "to lie."
The word 'lie' is both a noun and a verb (lie, lies, lying, lay, lain).The verb 'lie' is to:be in a flat position on a surface;move from standing or sitting to a flat position on a surface;be located in a particular place;be buried in a specified place;make a statement that is untrue;present a false impression or be deceptive.The verb 'lie' is a word for an action or a state of being.
Yes, "sin" is a noun. It refers to a wrongful act or transgression against divine or moral law.
yes and no. The word itself is, but it has completely different meanings in its two forms: a lie is a falsehood to lie is to position oneself so that you are resting, usually horizontally, on something
Lay can be the present tense of the transitive verb to lay, or the past tense of the intransitive verb to lie. Lay can also be a noun or adjective.ExamplesTransitive verb: First, you lay the pattern on the fabric and fasten it with pins.Intransitive verb: She lay in bed with the covers pulled up around her, but she did not sleep.Noun: He wanted to walk around to get the lay of the land.Adjective: The committee was made up of community clergy and influential lay people.
That is the correct spelling of "laid down" (verb to lay, transitive verb).The past tense of lie (lie down) would be lay down(verb to lie, intransitive verb).
"Sobbing" in that sentence is a verb; it is the participle form of the verb "to sob." There are two verbs in that sentence-- "lay" is also a verb (past tense of "to lie," as in, to lie down, to recline).
Yes, it is.