Lie is when someone do something that you know that it was doing it then it say no that was not me that call lie
or lie down on the bed is sleeping position
Lay is the same as put
Engly Lie died in 2001.
Gregory Lay's birth name is Gregory Keith Lay.
Susan Lay's birth name is Susan Michelle Lay.
The cast of Lie lie Lie - 1997 includes: Kazuyuki Aijima Miwako Kawai as Sendo, Kiki Akaji Maro as Den Tatsuo Matsumura as Hirasawa, Seiichiro Umejaku Nakamura as Mitani Honami Suzuki as Ui, Misaki Etsushi Toyokawa as Aikawa, Makoto
Michael Strøm Lie died in 1934.
They LIE down (to lie, lay, lain). LAY the table, please! (to lay, laid, laid).
lie
No, the past tense of lie is lay. For example, "Yesterday, I lay in bed all day."
The past tense of "lie" is "lay" and the past tense of "lay" is "laid".
The verb form of "lie" is "to lie."
The subjective tense of "lie" is "lay." The subjective forms of the verb "to lie" are "lie" (present tense) and "lay" (past tense).
The past tense of "lie down" is "lay down."
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.
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.
The past tense of "lie" (to recline) is "lay."
Both "lay down" and "lie down" can be used to convey the action of reclining for sleep; "lie down" is more technically correct, while "lay down" is more colloquially used. So, you can choose either phrase you prefer.
"Lay" is used when you place or put something down, while "lie" is used when someone or something reclines or rests in a horizontal position. For example, "Please lay the book on the table" uses "lay" because you are putting the book down, while "I need to lie down and rest" uses "lie" because you are in a resting position.