the past of lie
Present form is 'lie down'. Its past form is 'lay down'. If the preposition down does not follow the word 'lie' that can also mean - telling a false data. The past for this word is 'lied'
Yes. "He lied to you" means "he told you a lie" (both expressions mean the same thing).
past tense of lie
There is only one way to spell the word "lie".
The past tense of lie is lied.
Present form is 'lie down'. Its past form is 'lay down'. If the preposition down does not follow the word 'lie' that can also mean - telling a false data. The past for this word is 'lied'
Yes. "He lied to you" means "he told you a lie" (both expressions mean the same thing).
past tense of lie
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).
There is only one way to spell the word "lie".
The past tense of lie is lied.
Lied is the past form of lie.
The past tense of "lie" (as in to tell a lie, something that is not true) would be "lied". The past tense of "lie" (as in to lie down, recline) woulde be "laid", "lay", or "layed", depedning on how it is being used.
Lied is the past tense of lie.
The past tense of lie (to tell an untruth) is lied. Lied is also the past participle. The past tense of lie (to rest or recline in a horizontal position) is lay. Lain is the past participle.
The three tenses of the verb "lie" are present (lie), past (lay), and past participle (lain).
Both uses of the word lie have the same spelling: to tell a falsehood or to be recumbent. However, the conjugations will be different. (The past tenses are lied and lay, the past participles are lied and lain.)Same spelling"You're telling me a lie.""The cat liked to lie on the bed.""You are lying.""The cat is lying on the bed."Different spelling"Yesterday I lied to the police.""He lay on the bed, trying to relax." (not laid)"He has lied before.""That dog has lain on my good rug again."