• laid. Geniş Tasarım. ... (well) built of stones or bricks laid according to a pattern. örme. acting in accordance with the procedure laid down in article 252 of the Tre.
  • Uuluti laid, a small islet off the coast of Virtsu Peninsula in the Baltic Sea. Hanikatsi laid (Äpleö, meaning Apple Island), an Estonian islet in the Baltic Sea.
  • "Laid" is the past tense and past participle of "lay," meaning to put something down, while "lain" is the past participle of "lie," referring to the act of reclining.
  • "Layed" is incorrect, while "laid" is the correct spelling. "Laid" refers to the past tense and past participle of the verb "lay," meaning to set down or place something.
  • LAY meaning: 1 : to place (someone or something) down gently in a flat position often + down; 2 : to place (something) into position on or along a surface to build...
  • Birds lay their eggs (down). Warning: As you may have noticed, past tense of "to lie" is lay, that's one of the biggest reasons why we confuse them.
  • to put or place in a particular position:[~ + object]The dog laid its ears back. to cause to be in a particular state or condition:[~ + object]Their motives were laid bare.
  • Laid: With Ryan Pinkston, Chloe Fineman, Simu Liu, Uli Latukefu. Men in love are dying in unusual ways for the same woman, she must come to terms with her...
    • they vary between transitive and intransitive according to sense
    • the present tense of lay is the past tense of the irregular lie
    The important thing to remember with lay is that it is transitive, so it MUST have a...
    • "If you were any more desperate to get laid, you'd be willing to pay for it."
    • "Your face looks like it was hit with a frying pan, no wonder you can't get laid."
    • "I bet you haven't gotten laid since the Bush administration."