it's just another meaning of saying "lay"
I lay in the sun. (The verb in this sentence is intransitive, meaning it does not have an object, so you should use the past tense of the verb to lie, which is lay. The similar-meaning verb to lay, the past tense of which is laid, is a transitive verb, so the subject of the sentence would need to lay something "in the sun.")
laid off
The khim is a dulcimer from Thailand and Cambodia. It is wooden and shaped like a trapezoid, and has bass strings laid across the instrument. There are a total of 42 strings.
Lain because "i have laid in a hammock" is like saying "She has laid out in the sun"
it is you laid it before him
to get laid
That is the corect spelling, "I laid the carpet." Here, laid is the past tense of to lay meaning to put it down on the floor.
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.
it means protection laid stone
There is a difference between laid off or layed off. In relation to being dismissed from work, the correct phrase to use is laid off. Layed off actually has no grammatical meaning.
emphasis: special stress laid upon, or importance attached to, anything.
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.
It means you are just a horny monkey that wants to get laid
The Only Way Is Essex + Getting Laid = Perfect Life =)
To lay an egg means to do something poorly or that something was ill-received. When we played for the championship, we laid an egg. I performed my monologue flawlessly yet I still laid an egg.
Where & when the keel was laid down; meaning when they started building the bottom of the ship (the keel is the bottom of the ship). Like a person's spine and ribs, a ship is the same way, only made of metal instead of bone.
I lay in the sun. (The verb in this sentence is intransitive, meaning it does not have an object, so you should use the past tense of the verb to lie, which is lay. The similar-meaning verb to lay, the past tense of which is laid, is a transitive verb, so the subject of the sentence would need to lay something "in the sun.")