lie, laid, lay?
In present, we say: I lying on the grass.
How is it in the past?
I lay on the grass for rest.
or: i laid on the grass?
Furthermore, can I say: I lying down on the grass?
Present:
I lie on the grass / I am lying on the grass
Past:
I lay on the grass / I was lying on the grass
Be careful. 'to lie' and 'to lay' are two different verbs.
To lie = to be in or put yourself in a horizontal position. e.g. I LIE down to rest. The 'ing' form is LYING. The simple past is LAY. The past participle is LAIN.
To lay = to put down or put in position horizontally. e.g. I will LAY the rug on the floor. The 'ing' form is LAYING. The simple past is LAID. The past participle is LAID.
June 12, 2012
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In present , we say " I lay on the grass to rest".
In past tense "I laid on the grass to rest".
In preset continuous tense " I am lying ont he grass to rest".
Hope this helps. lying is continuous..you are still doing that action.
June 12, 2012
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Sherry
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), Chinese (Cantonese), English, Italian, Thai