捨てる this is how you say lay down in Japanese
The Japanese verb for 'to sit' is 'suwaru.'---If you're talking to a pet it is 'osuwari.'If you are saying "sit down" to a person, you would say Suwarinasai.
To say "Lay eggs" in French you say "Pondre"
we say Nakagawa if we want to say inside in Japanese.
To say tennis in Japanese.........テニス
メロン is how you say melon in Japanese.
ウクレレ (ooo kooo lay lay)
The past tense of "lay down" is "laid down."
To some just say lay down and tap the floor or rub your hand on the floor.
Nuwo
You should say "I am going to lie down." "Lie" is the correct verb to use when referring to reclining or resting horizontally. "Lay" requires a direct object and is used when placing something down.
Suwarinasai
"Lay down" is past tense. Present tense would be "lie down." You would say, "I lie down on my bed right now," which is in the present, but "I lay down on my bed yesterday," which is in the past. The verb itself is "lie," meaning to recline. The verb "lay" means to place something somewhere. You might say, "I lay the book on the table right now" (present tense), but "I laid the paper on the floor yesterday."
You will have to have treats with you. The dog will see it so direct the treat to the floor and it will lay. After a while you will need to say lay or down while the dog is going down.
You may say 'ochitsuite kudasai'.
No, you set the book down or lay the book down, but you don't "sat the book down"
You can say "allonge-toi avec moi" in French to ask someone to lay down with you.
They LIE down (to lie, lay, lain). LAY the table, please! (to lay, laid, laid).