Can you lay down please.
It doesn't really matter because you can use both of them in the sentence.
She asked him to lay the book on the table, but he lied and said he already did.
"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.
He fell lazily onto the sofa for serving the common good. Really??
Jedi can wield the unseen Force. The lay unseen under the bush. Tom could not find his wallet as it lay unseen under the dresser.
Some reptiles lay eggs, and some are viviparous. I can use the word viviparous in a sentence!
sometimes I lay on a hammock just to relax.
I snagged a cookie from the countertop, where it lay, unattended.
The severed branch of the tree lay on the ground.
im wondering the same thinig
I am very reclusive in my ways of discovering that pigs lay eggs.
The unknown creature lay asleep in front of our eyes.
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.")
She lay in a chance longue, watching it swimming idly at the dock.XD:);):D
The dog lay motionless in the street as the car drove away.
The sentence "Wherever you lay your hat, that place is your home" is a complex sentence. It contains an independent clause ("that place is your home") and a dependent clause ("Wherever you lay your hat") that provides additional context. The use of "wherever" introduces a condition, making the sentence reliant on the first part for its full meaning.
Luke's affiliation lay with the company, but David's lay with the pub. The college decided to review its affiliation with the NCAA.