The man was lain to rest.
It had lain there undisturbed for a hundred thousand years or more.
There is a form of past tense of the verb lay, which is lain.
I am...you are...he/she/it is...we are...you are...they are
A homonym for "lane" is "lain," which is the past participle of the verb "to lie."
The homophone to "lane" would be "lain," which is the past participle of the verb "to lie" (as in to recline or be situated).
It had lain there undisturbed for a hundred thousand years or more.
There is a form of past tense of the verb lay, which is lain.
I am...you are...he/she/it is...we are...you are...they are
A homonym for "lane" is "lain," which is the past participle of the verb "to lie."
The homophone to "lane" would be "lain," which is the past participle of the verb "to lie" (as in to recline or be situated).
It is usually the direct object of a verb so I say it's a noun. i have access. i can access. you can't say i access and use it correctly.
Correctly is an adverb
An adverb my come before or after the verb it is describing. It is fine to say "using correctly" and to say "correctly using". One hesitation would be if you are using an adverb to describe a verb in its infinitive form. Traditionally it has been considered incorrect to use the adverb before the verb. This is called a split infinitive. So if unless you're an established author, stay away from using phrases like "to correctly use".
The principal parts ( i.e. the present, preterite and past participle ) of the verb to lie ( meaning to be or to become recumbent ) are lie, lay and lain. I lie there today; I lay there yesterday; I have lain there for a week.
The homophone for a lane or track is "lain," which is the past participle of the verb "to lie."
It depends on which sense of the verb you mean: To rest or to tell an untruth. I have lain on my bed for an hour. I have lied only once before. (Oops -- that's twice.)
The three tenses of the verb "lie" are present (lie), past (lay), and past participle (lain).