Lay vs Lie

Lay vs lie
Don’t lay the tray on the bed, I want to lie down.
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Mixed up English

The English verbs lay and lie are commonly confused by even native English speakers. I’m not lying when I say that you can now lay your fears of not knowing the difference to rest.

Lay

Lay is a transitive verb, which means that it must be used with a direct object.

Please lay the books on the table.

I am laying the books on the table.

Have you ever seen a chicken lay an egg?

The chicken has been laying eggs all week.

"Now I lay me down to sleep…"

The past tense and the past participle of lay are both laid.

I laid the books on the table.

Have you laid the books on the table?

The chicken just laid two eggs.

He laid himself down to sleep.

Lie

Lie is an intransitive verb, which means it cannot have a direct object.

Lie down next to me.

I am lying next to her.

I just want to lie in bed all day.

I’m thinking about lying in bed all day.

Don’t lie on the floor!

The past tense of lie is lay and the past participle is lain.

Yesterday, I lay down next to her.

He has lain down with us.

Yesterday, he lay in bed all day.

I lay on the floor last week and you didn’t say anything.

Lie (past tense lied) means to say something untrue.

Don’t lie to me.

He lied about where he got the money.

The Bottom Line

There are two problems here. One is that lie and lay mean more or less the same thing; it’s just that lie is intransitive and lay is transitive. In addition, the past tense of lie is identical to the present tense lay. Just remember that in the present, you lie down/on/in, but you lay something. Once you’ve got that straight in your head, you just need to work on the past tenses and you’ll be all set – no lie!

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Lie vs lay

11 Responses

  1. Moi 4 May 2014 / 09:22

    Thanks, I always get confused with this

  2. Andrea 18 June 2014 / 20:31

    So would I say “my son just lay down after whimpering for a minute.” ? You can help me with my punctuation next lol

  3. lkl 19 June 2014 / 11:03

    Yes, that’s correct.

  4. Desiree 1 July 2014 / 11:29

    Hi!

    Could you help clarify what to use in the following context?

    “The responsibility lies/lays with me”

  5. lkl 5 July 2014 / 11:50

    Lies, because there is no direct object.

  6. CA 28 August 2014 / 11:18

    What about:
    “that tells me just where my attention should lay/lie”

    “Lie” there to me looks like I’m calling my attention a liar 🙂

  7. lkl 28 August 2014 / 14:39

    Ha, yes, but “lie” is the only correct answer because it’s intransitive.

  8. CM 5 September 2014 / 19:01

    In the midst of a sprawling community lies Anyname Park.

    or

    In the midst of a sprawling community lays Anyname Park.

  9. lkl 6 September 2014 / 11:21

    >>In the midst of a sprawling community lies Anyname Park.

    This one is correct. Even though Anyname Park follows the verb, it’s not the direct object, but rather the subject of “lies.” You can tell because you can reword it to “Anyname Park lies in the midst of a sprawling community.”

  10. bob 25 May 2015 / 18:05

    so is it “Because the apartment isn’t big enough to lie anywhere else?”
    Is it lay because the apartment Is he direct object being referred to?

    Thanks

  11. lkl 27 May 2015 / 14:21

    No, it’s “lie.” Apartment is the subject of the verb lie, not the direct object.

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