字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 There are some verbs in English that some people find confusing. And I think near the top of that list is "lie/lay." So let's outline the problem. We have one verb that is intransitive--that would be "lie." So: "Today I lie down; yesterday I lay down." Then we have "lay," which is transitive. In other words, it can take an object. So we say, "Today, I lay the book down; yesterday I laid the book down." What's so confusing about these two is that the past tense of one ("lie/lay") is the present tense of the other, ("lay/laid"). How did that happen? Well, that happened because these two verbs are actually historically related to each other. If we go all the way back to Old English, we see that there are two kinds of verbs. There's one kind of verb that forms the past tense by changing the vowel. So: "ring/rang," "swim/swam," "lie/lay." And we still have some of those in English. The other kind of verb in Old English takes a "duh" sound, a "D," to form the past tense. So: "talk/talked," "lay/laid." In Old English what would sometimes happen with an intransitive verb like "lie," is that you could create an "-ed" verb to make it transitive. So we took "lay" and created the transitive verb. So when in doubt, just remember that if there's an object, it will be "lay/laid." And if there's no object, and you just want to take a nap, it's "lie/lay."
A2 初級 Anne Curzan的《語言與文法》第四部分 (The Word on Language and Grammar with Anne Curzan, Part 4) 885 61 drsueec 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日 更多分享 分享 收藏 回報 影片單字