English, asked by dhruvi20907, 8 months ago

theres an error in each of the following sentences rewrite the sentences connecting the errors .
1)where has the hen lain the eggs ?
2)Gandhiji found the sabarmati ashram
3)the dead body lied there for a long time
4)The river water flew down the slope
5)The men felled the tree but it did not fell on me
pls answer it guys​

Answers

Answered by bhandarepranay05
0

Explanation:

Please mark it as brainliest

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Answered by omshreeshankhdhar
0

Present Tense:

Lay: Unfold the blanket and lay it on the floor.

Lie: This stuff is pretty groundbreaking; you’d better lie down.

The difference in the present tense seems pretty straightforward: lay refers to a direct object, and lie does not.

Past Tense:

Lay: She laid the blanket on the floor when I asked.

Lie: I felt sick, so I lay down.

Here’s where it can get a bit tricky. The past tense of lie is lay, but not because there is any overlap between the two verbs. So when you say, “I lay down for a nap,” you’re actually using the verb lie, not lay, despite the way it sounds.

Past Participle:

Lay: She had laid the blanket down before she left.

Lie: I had lain there for some time before getting up.

The past participle form is a common point of error. Many people accidentally use lied instead of lain when using the verb lie. Lied, however, refers to the past tense and past participle form of lie when it means “to make an untrue statement.”

Present participle:

Lay: I was laying the blanket on the floor.

Lie: You’ve been lying down all day.

Your best bet when deciding between the variations of lay and lie is to determine whether there is a direct object you’re referring to. If there is, then use a form of lay.

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