Lie vs Lay - English In A Minute

دوره: انگلیسی در یک دقیقه / درس 21

انگلیسی در یک دقیقه

71 درس

Lie vs Lay - English In A Minute

توضیح مختصر

Lay and lie are easy words to confuse! Learn the difference with English In A Minute! Sians going to show you the differences between lay and lie! Watch the video then answer the question! Is this sentence correct? If not, can you fix it? I like to lay on the beach and read a book. [?]Visit our website for the transcript, a summary and more quizzes- http-//www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/english/course/eiam/unit-1/session-33 Learn English with BBC Learning English. Every day we help you to learn English with our brilliant mix of grammar, vocabulary, pronunciation, news and inspiring English programmes. We also produce regular extra videos across the week so come back every day to see whats new. Regular content MONDAY- The English We Speak MONDAY- English in a Minute TUESDAY- News Review WEDNESDAY- LingoHack THURSDAY- 6 Minute English FRIDAY- Editors Choice Please use English when you comment. For more videos and content that will help you learn English, visit our website- http-//www.bbclearningenglish.com ( About the sentence- its not correct. Here you need the verb lie. The correct sentence is- I like to lie on the beach and read a book.

  • زمان مطالعه 0 دقیقه
  • سطح خیلی ساده

دانلود اپلیکیشن «زبانشناس»

این درس را می‌توانید به بهترین شکل و با امکانات عالی در اپلیکیشن «زبانشناس» بخوانید

دانلود اپلیکیشن «زبانشناس»

فایل ویدیویی

برای دسترسی به این محتوا بایستی اپلیکیشن زبانشناس را نصب کنید.

متن انگلیسی درس

I’m Sian from BBC Learning English, and today we’re going to look at the difference between ‘lay’ and ‘lie’. So ‘lay’ always has an object, and it means ‘put something or someone down carefully’ – normally in a flat position. When I eat I lay a cloth on the table. You can lay a baby in a cot. The past tense is ‘laid’, but careful with the spelling. I laid all my cards on the table. The verb ‘lie’ doesn’t have an object and it means that you are ‘in a flat position’ or you ‘put yourself in a flat position’ - so you move on your own. Tonight I want to lie on the sofa and watch a film. But be careful. Now, the past of ‘lie’ is ‘lay’. Yesterday I lay on the beach and read my book.

مشارکت کنندگان در این صفحه

تا کنون فردی در بازسازی این صفحه مشارکت نداشته است.

🖊 شما نیز می‌توانید برای مشارکت در ترجمه‌ی این صفحه یا اصلاح متن انگلیسی، به این لینک مراجعه بفرمایید.