Lay, laying, lying, and laid are all verbs.
Lay is a present tense transitive verb and is also the past tense of the present tense intransitive verb lie.
Laying is the present participle of lay and is used to create the progressive tenses.
Lying is the present participle of the verb lie.
Laid is the past tense of lay.
There is no such word as "layed"; the correct answer is "laid". For those who doubt this, it can be confirmed by any dictionary, including those readily available for free on the web. It's wise to check reliable sources. Layed seems to have been an alternative spelling until the 17th century, but is only used now when misspelling the past tense of the word lay.
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).
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.")
There are two different verbs: # Transitive (object): to lay - lays - laid - laid - to place something (in a lying position) # Intransitive (no object): to lie - lies - lay - lain
In formal English there are two verbs. Lie is an intransitive verb, which means it has no object: They lie on the floor. on the floor is a preposition phrase, not an object. The principal parts are lie lay lain, but many people do not use these forms, using lie lied liedinstead. In other words, lie is an irregular verb, but it is used colloquially at least as a regular verb. Lay is a transitive verb, which means it has an object: She laid the book on the table. The forms are lay laid laid. Lay is a regular verb except for the spelling.
That is the correct spelling of "laying" (verb to lay) and can be used to mean a bird or animal laying eggs, laying carpet, or laying something down.The other form of lay is as the past tense of the verb to lie (down), which forms lying down.
The past tense of the verb "lay" is "laid."
No, lying is not the present tense form of the verb "lay." "Lying" is the present participle form of the verb "lie," which means to recline or rest horizontally. "Lay" is the base form of the verb that means to put something down.
The past participle form of the verb "lay" is "laid."
No. Laying is the present participle. It can be a verb, a participial, or a noun (gerund).
The word laid is a verb. It is the past tense of the word lay.
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.
Laying is a transitive thing - you do it tosomething.Lying is intransitive - you just do it.e.g. " I was lying on the couch when I realised that my wife was laying lunch on the small table next to me."Or, put another way, 'lying' takes 'on the couch' as an indirect object; 'laying' takes 'lunch' as a direct object.
Yes, laid is the past tense and past participle forms of the transitive verb lay. For example: I laid your books on the table.
No, laid is a verb (past tense of lay).
"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."
There is no such word as "layed"; the correct answer is "laid". For those who doubt this, it can be confirmed by any dictionary, including those readily available for free on the web. It's wise to check reliable sources. Layed seems to have been an alternative spelling until the 17th century, but is only used now when misspelling the past tense of the word lay.