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The Lie-Lay Confusion Explained

 

Lay and lie are two words often interchanged mistakenly in business documents.

Lay means “to place.” Lie, as a verb, means “to recline or tell an untruth.” (Lie, as a noun, means a falsehood.) Lie, as a noun is generally clear, but the verb lie and the verb lay can be confusing.

Lay (principal parts: lay, laid, laying) means “to put” or “to place” and needs an object to complete its meaning:
* Please lay the brochures carefully on the desk.
* I laid the two other notes there yesterday.
* The sales manager is always laying the blame on his staff when sales drop.

Lie (principal parts: lie, lay, lain, lying) means “recline or rest, or stay.” It can refer to either a person or thing as assuming or being in a reclining position. The verb “lie” cannot take an object:
* Now he lies in bed most of the day, sulking about the lost sale.
* The opportunities lay before us.
* This RFP has lain unanswered for days.
* Today’s mail is lying on the receptionist’s desk.

Here is an easy tip to check your use of these verbs: substitute the word “place, placed, or placing (depending on grammar structure.)  If the substitute fits, lay is correct. If not, use lie.

Remember: Lay = place.

To test this:

*I will (lie or lay) down now. You would not write, “I will place down now.” So, this tells you readily that lay is correct in this sentence: “I will lay down now.”
* I (laid or lay) the pad on his desk.  “I placed the pad on his desk” makes sense, so, lay is correct in this sentence: “I laid the pad on the desk.” (past tense)
* These files have (laid or lain) untouched for days. You would not write, “These files have placed untouched for days” so lie is correct: “These files have lain untouched.”

A very helpful site for a quick review of confusing words is, logically, Confusing Words.

Learn More in This Course: Business Grammar: Error-Free Writing

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