You must not lie to me.
Let sleeping dogs lie.
The jury saw through the lie and found him guilty.
No, the word "lie" is not an adjective. It can be a verb or a noun, depending on how it is used in a sentence.
Yes. In the below sentence, this word is used in a sentence. "She had had a presentiment of what might lie ahead."
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.
He was known to often fabricate a lie or stretch the truth.
You should never lie to the one you love.I need to lie down.
The next sentence is a lie because it is not a sentence, it has no verb. So, the first sentence is also a lie because there is no 'next sentence'.
Truth is what is real, a lie is made up.
I have listened to your answer and I'm afraid that it is no more than an egregious lie
Just one salt granule can be irritating if you lie on it in bed.
Collinear means points that lie on the same line.
butbe up top
"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).