Lied is the past tense of lie.
Lied. Example: "You lied to me!"
The past tense of "lie" is "lied." For example, "She lied about her whereabouts last night."
He had lied about his whereabouts to the police.
The past tense of lie is lied.
Liar is a noun. There is no past tense. Ex: "He is a liar"; "He was a liar"
Lied. Example: "You lied to me!"
The past tense of "lie" is "lied." For example, "She lied about her whereabouts last night."
He had lied about his whereabouts to the police.
The past tense of lie is lied.
Liar is a noun. There is no past tense. Ex: "He is a liar"; "He was a liar"
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 past tense of "lie" is "lay" and the past tense of "lay" is "laid".
Lei is a noun and so doesn't have a past tense. Only verbs have tenses.
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.
The past tense of lie is Lay, as in I lay on the couch. The past tense of the other lie is Lied- I lied about eating my broccoli, while in reality I had fed it to the dog.
Yes. It is the past tense of "to lie".
The past tense and the past participle of the verb 'to lie', meaning 'to tell an untruth', are both 'lied': 'I lied when I told you I loved you.' 'I have lied to you ever since we met.' The past tense of the verb 'to lie', meaning 'to be situated', is 'lay', and the past participle is 'lain': 'I lay on a towel on the beach in the sun.' 'I have lain there every day this week.'