lay down
Laid
Laid
You don't have to lay down after intercourse to get pregnant.
on the groundThe previous answer: (they sleep like horses standing up). THIS IS A LIE. They bed down and lay on their stomachs. Google image search it.
If your dog is still under the bush it is my dog lay under the bush but if he's not under it still it's my dog laid under the bush.
It is extremely unlikely. Fleas do lay eggs under people's skin. But bedbugs normally lay their eggs on a hard surface either in the bed most typically in the folds of the mattress the bed structure or in furniture near the bed. It is extremely unlikely bedbugs will ever lay its eggs on a living person or a pet.
Spawn is the name of the eggs that are laid by frogs.
I laid down for a nap this afternoon, because 'this afternoon' implies past tense. If you want 'I lay down for a nap', then you take out the 'this afternoon'.
The correct way to say "I laid down" would be "I lay down." The past tense of "lay" is "laid" (e.g., "I laid the book on the table"), whereas the simple past of "lie" should be used here for the action of reclining.
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).
He was laid on the bed.
laid down Neither - it's lay, the past tense of to lie.
I lie the book on the table. NOW I laid the book down when I finished with it. PAST Lie down now! When did you lie down yesterday? (The rule: Chickens lay eggs. Everything else lies. Laid is correct only when applied to past tense)
The manager laid the papers on his table is the correct past tense. (to lay)The word "lay" is the past tense of the intransitive verb (to lie, to lie down), e.g. The manager lay on the table (not the papers).
The past tense of lay can be laid, or just lay. For example, yesterday the hen laid an egg. However, we do not say that we "laid on the bed", but that we "lay on the bed".The present perfect tense can be "has lain" or "has laid", e.g. "He has lain on that couch, doing nothing, for days" or "Your pet hen has laid an egg on the couch".
The past tense of "lay down" is "laid down."
They LIE down (to lie, lay, lain). LAY the table, please! (to lay, laid, laid).
"Laid" is the past tense and past participle of the verb "to lay," which means to put something down. "Laid" is used when referring to an action that has already happened, while "lay" is used in the present tense. For example, "She laid the book on the table yesterday" or "She is laying the book on the table now."
Laid, transitive verb here. You lay what? Object of the verb here is "the phone," so you need the verb "to lay" (not "to lie") Past tense of "to lay" is "laid." (Just to make matters worse, "lay" is past tense of "to lie," the verb you don't need here.) Good question!