The present tense of "lay" is "lay" or "lays" depending on the subject.
The present tense of "struck" is "strike."
The past tense of "lay" is "laid."
The simple past tense of "lay" is "laid."
Yes, the past of lie (to rest or recline in a horizontal position) is lay. Lay is also a present tense verb meaning to place something in a horizontal position. The past tense of lay is laid.The past tense of lie (to speak an untruth) is lied.
"Lay" is the present tense form while "laid" is the past tense form. For example: I lay the book on the table (present tense) and I laid the book on the table (past tense).
The present tense of "struck" is "strike."
I, we, they, you write. He, she, it writes.
The past tense of "lay" is "laid."
The simple past tense of "lay" is "laid."
Yes, the past of lie (to rest or recline in a horizontal position) is lay. Lay is also a present tense verb meaning to place something in a horizontal position. The past tense of lay is laid.The past tense of lie (to speak an untruth) is lied.
"Lay" is the present tense form while "laid" is the past tense form. For example: I lay the book on the table (present tense) and I laid the book on the table (past tense).
The past tense of "lie" is "lay" and the past tense of "lay" is "laid".
The past tense of "lay" is "laid."
The past tense of lie (to speak an untruth) is lied.The past tense of lie (to rest in a horizontal position) is lay.Lay is also a present tense verb, and its past tense form is laid.
The present tense for "laid" is "lay." For example: "I lay the book on the table."
It depends on the context.If the verb 'lay' refers to a hen laying an egg or someone laying the table, the future tense is will lay.If the verb 'lay' refers to the past tense of 'lie', e.g. "the pile of books lay on the table", then the future tense is will lie.
The past tense form of "lay" is "laid."