Lay and laid are both parts of the same verb.
The infinitive is lay, e.g. to lay; Let me lay the table.
Lay is also the simple present (except for the third person singular, with he, she, or it):
Every day I lay the table for breakfast.
Laid is the simple past:
When the phone rang she laid her book down.
It is also the past participle:
That hen has not laid an egg for two weeks.
The table was laid by the time I arrived.
The past tense of lay is "laid"
I/you/we/they have laid. She/he/it has laid.
present - past - past participle lay - laid - laid Not to be confused with lie - lay - lain
Laid is the past tense of lay.
The answer involves the difference between the verbs lieand lay. Lie is the correct verb to describe putting yourself in a horizontal position, as in "lie down". Lay is a transitive verb (used with an object) and is used for placing or positioning something, as in "lay a book on the table".The present, past, and past participle forms of "lie" are lie, lay, and lain. The present, past, and past participle forms of "lay" are lay, laid, and laid. If the question is about lying down (to rest or to sleep), the correct form is "I lay down." It is worth mentioning that incorrect usage of lay instead of lie (as in "I laid down") is very common.
The past tense of lay is "laid"
I/you/we/they have laid. She/he/it has laid.
you lay
present - past - past participle lay - laid - laid Not to be confused with lie - lay - lain
Laid is the past tense of lay.
The answer involves the difference between the verbs lieand lay. Lie is the correct verb to describe putting yourself in a horizontal position, as in "lie down". Lay is a transitive verb (used with an object) and is used for placing or positioning something, as in "lay a book on the table".The present, past, and past participle forms of "lie" are lie, lay, and lain. The present, past, and past participle forms of "lay" are lay, laid, and laid. If the question is about lying down (to rest or to sleep), the correct form is "I lay down." It is worth mentioning that incorrect usage of lay instead of lie (as in "I laid down") is very common.
The past tense is laid.
The present tense for "laid" is "lay." For example: "I lay the book on the table."
The past tense of the transitive verb lay is laid. Example: I laid the book on the table.The past participle of lay is have/has laid. Example: I have always laid my books on this table.
"Laid" is the past tense of lay.
no
The past participle is laid.