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'.
A nap a laid hey key pa dock tray
I lay down
I lay down
I lay. Down
no. the sentence should be 'the ball fell down'
"I walked down the lane" and "I went to the store" are both grammatically correct. I'm not sure if I understand the question :/
Yes, although it is somewhat idiomatic. It means you think that you should lie down.
No, it is not grammatically correct because it has a redundancy of words. The correct phrase is, " . . . where are you?" (This one is nearly as bad as " end result", or "fall down", or "rise up".)
Yes, the sentence "You can lie down in the lounge" is correct. It is a statement indicating that lying down is allowed or possible in the lounge.
The only thing wrong with this sentence is that both parts of the sentence are in present perfect. Rewriting the sentence without contractions: "He has gone down, and he has not put his hands out to break his fall". One wouldn't say this. One would say, "He has gone down, and he did not put his hands out to break his fall"; or "He went down, and he did not put his hands out to break his fall".
This is an idiomatic phrase, and the correct verb is "lie" (which you do) rather than lay (which you do to something else)."You really need to lie down" means "You should lie down."
If something has been inverted it has been put upside down, reversed or put in opposite order etc. An example of inverted sentence structure is: "Dark is the night's sky" (as, typically, the grammatically correct sentence would read: "The night sky is dark")
No, it is not correct. The correct phrasing would be "all the tins fell."
Only if you are car surfing (riding on the top of a car with your hair whipping in the wind as it is speeding down the road). The more commonly used sentence would be "I'm in the car" which means you are sitting in the car.
On a Sunday afternoon my friend and I went walking down the park.
I think its "I want lie down"