Roger Woodham replies:'lie' or 'lay'?
lie (+ phrase of place) / lay (+ object)
Perhaps the easiest way to remember the difference, Antonio, is that lay is a transitive verb which needs an object to complete its meaning and lie is an intransitive verb which functions without an object and is followed normally by a phrase of place.
First,
see how the words look in the present and the past tense.
|
Now compare the following:
lay ( + object) | She laid the baby on the bed in order to change its nappy. |
lie ( + phrase of place) | She was lying asleep on the sofa when her husband arrived home. |
lay ( + object) | Can you lay the table for me please? Lunch is ready. |
lie ( + phrase of place) | I told her not to lie out in the sun, but she must have lain there for at least an hour for her back was very sunburnt. |
lay ( + object) | I had never laid carpets before, but I was determined to have a go. |
lie ( + phrase of place) | When I looked out of the aircraft window, I could see that London lay beneath us. |
lay ( + object) | His lawyer will lay great emphasis on his state of mind when the murder was committed and claim that it was manslaughter, not murder. |
lie ( + phrase of place) | None of us knows what lies ahead, but you must try to take a grip on your life and decide where your future lies. |