To lay an egg means to do something poorly or that something was ill-received. When we played for the championship, we laid an egg. I performed my monologue flawlessly yet I still laid an egg.
The past tense of lay can be laid, or just lay. For example, yesterday the hen laid an egg. However, we do not say that we "laid on the bed", but that we "lay on the bed".The present perfect tense can be "has lain" or "has laid", e.g. "He has lain on that couch, doing nothing, for days" or "Your pet hen has laid an egg on the couch".
No, "laid" is not a noun. It is the past tense and past participle form of the verb "lay," meaning to put or place something down.
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.
No, "an egg" is a noun, a type of reproductive state. But there is a verb "to egg" meaning to incite or urge (egg on).
"Hei hei" in Maori can refer to a kite or a type of decoration made from feathers.
the goose laid a golden egg.
Mummy Laid an Egg was created in 1994.
The ISBN of Mummy Laid an Egg is 0099299119.
Mummy Laid an Egg has 40 pages.
That is the correct spelling of "laid" (an egg, or a new floor).
laid
egg white
The ostrich egg
a Montague egg is an egg that is laid by a chicken that was owned by a motague
the bird laid it there
Andrew Carnegie called investment the goose that laid the golden egg.
pick up the egg