Diego Naveda
this sentence is right? where things lie still this sentence is right? where things lie still I'm asking about "lie" other example: difficult times lie ahead
Apr 15, 2009 4:51 AM
Answers · 4
1
"where things lie still" is not a sentence
April 15, 2009
1
yes i believe so. the word "lie" in your sentence act as a noun meaning to be positioned or situated somewhere (same as lay).
April 15, 2009
"Where things lie still." is a sentence and is correct. The subject is implied: "Where is it? (It is) Where things lie still." There is a difference between "lie" and "lay". "Lie" means that someone or something is situated somewhere. "Lay" means that something is begin put somewhere. "The cat lies on the sofa." "He lay the cat on the sofa." The difference is that "lie" doesn't take a direct object ("ON the sofa"). "Lay" does take a direct object ("the cat"). So grammatically, Eric Clapton's "Lay Down Sally" is incorrect. It should be "Lie Down Sally." Musically, however, it's incredible and should remain exactly as it is. This is why you never heard of an English teacher with a gold record.
April 15, 2009
"Difficult times lie ahead" is correct. "Lie" is a verb in the sentence, not a noun, but the meaning provided by romulus is correct. "Where things lie still" is also correct. Also, your question should have been "Is this sentence correct?" rather than "This sentence is right?".
April 15, 2009
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