Laid is already the past tense and past participle of lay.
Laid is the past tense and past participle of lay.
The past tense of the transitive verb lay is laid. Example: I laid the book on the table.The past participle of lay is have/has laid. Example: I have always laid my books on this table.
laid
LAID The original verb here is "to lay", a transitive verb requiring a direct object. The present tense is "lay" (such as a book on a table), past tense is "laid" and the past participle is "laid" such as I have laid the book on the table every evening. The verb that means to rest or recline (intransitive with no direct object) is "to lie", past tense is lay, and past participle is lain.
The past tense is was or were.The past participle is been.
If by "lay" is meant the present indicative and infinitive form of "to lay", a transitive verb, the past participle is "laid". "Lay", however, is also the past indicative form of the irregular and intransitive verb "to lie", and if that is the meaning of "lay", it, like other past tense verbs, has no participle of its own; the past participle of this meaning of "lie" is lain.
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, laid is the past tense and past participle forms of the transitive verb lay. For example: I laid your books on the table.
Lead is present tense. The present participle is leading. Led is the past tense and past participle.
Past tense - was and were. Past participle - been.
The simple past tense is did. The past participle is done.
Has is the present tense, third person singular conjugation of have. The past tense and past participle of have is had.