Lie down and go to sleep.
A budgie can lay 1-4 eggs in a batch. I don't think they can lay 5, but it might be possible.My budgie laid 6 eggs this morning
It's Ecstasy When You Lay Down Next to Me was created in 1977.
Roll Over Lay Down was created on 1975-05-13.
Know i lay me down to sleep if i die before i wake I pray the lord my sole to keep god bless mommy, daddy,and all the children all around the world
Lay Down Your Arms - Doron Levinson song - was created in 1973.
They LIE down (to lie, lay, lain). LAY the table, please! (to lay, laid, laid).
Laid, Have Laid, or Have Lain. Pending on context.
Use lie, lay, lain when there is no direct object: I lie down; the book lay on the shelf, where it had lain for days. Use lay, laid, laid when there is a direct object: Now I lay me down to sleep; I laid the book on the same shelf where I had laid it before. Other such pairs of verbs occur in English. One is always intransitive, like lie, and the other is always transitive, like lay. The past tense of the intransitive verb resembles the present tense of the transitive verb, as in lie:lay and lay:laid, or fall:fell and fell: felled; and sit:sat and set:set
The past participle of "lay" is "laid." For example, "She laid the book on the table."
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".
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.
"LIE" is intransitive (has no direct object, can't be done to something else), meaning to be in a state of rest. If you go to bed, you lie down. Past tense is "lay" (yes, confusing), as in "he lay there for several seconds before breathing"; perfect tense is "lain", as in "he had lain there for quite some time". "LAY" is transitive (requires a direct object, can be done to something else), meaning to set something down. That's why they say "lay me down to sleep" because "me" is the object. You lay down the carpeting, but lie down on the carpet. Past and perfect tenses are both "laid"- "he laid his guns down" and "they had already laid the foundation before the contractors arrived". Just for more confusion with these two words: "they laid down the carpet and then lay on it afterward." [And of course, "lie" also means to tell something that is not true past and perfect tenses are both "lied".]
lay down
had lain or had laid e.g. The hen had laidan egg. The sick child had lain in bed for three days.
laid down Neither - it's lay, the past tense of to lie.
There are two different verbs: # Transitive (object): to lay - lays - laid - laid - to place something (in a lying position) # Intransitive (no object): to lie - lies - lay - lain
The past tense of "lay down" is "laid down."