Layyest can be categorized as an adjective.
Adjective |
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lay - not of or from a profession; "a lay opinion as to the cause of the disease" | ||
lay - characteristic of those who are not members of the clergy; "set his collar in laic rather than clerical position"; "the lay ministry" |
# | Sentence | ||
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1. | verb | Lay the books on the table. | |
2. | verb | Lay the patient carefully onto the bed. | |
3. | verb | This hen doesn't lay. | |
4. | verb | Lay a fire. | |
5. | verb | Lay the foundation for a new health care plan. | |
6. | verb | Lay a responsibility on someone. | |
7. | adj. | A lay opinion as to the cause of the disease. | |
8. | adj. | The lay ministry. | |
9. | adj. | As religious people, clergy and lay leaders, we are mandated by faith to stand for justice in our common civic life. | |
10. | adj. | A dog jumped onto the chair and lay motionless for five minutes. | |
11. | adj. | A cat jumped onto the chair and lay motionless. | |
12. | adj. | You're pretty good with the lay of the land. | |
13. | adj. | She really is a good lay. | |
14. | adj. | It surprised me that platypus lay eggs. | |
15. | adj. | I'll try to get a lay of the land before I start contributing. | |
16. | adj. | To his eyes all seemed beautiful, but to me a tinge of melancholy lay upon the country-side, which bore so clearly the mark of the waning year. | |
17. | adj. | As when a snake, that through the winter's cold / lay swoln and hidden in the ground from sight, / gorged with rank herbs, forth issues to the light, / and sleek with shining youth and newly drest, / wreathing its slippery volumes, towers upright / and, glorying, to the sunbeam rears its breast, / and darts a three-forked tongue, and points a flaming crest. | |
18. | adj. | Flies lay eggs. | |
19. | adj. | So it came to pass in the evening, that quails coming up, covered the camp: and in the morning a dew lay round about the camp. | |
20. | adj. | Yanni shut the door and went lay on his bed. | |
21. | adj. | Everywhere lay bottles, seed husks, and other litter. |
Sentence | |
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verb | |
Lay the books on the table. |
|
Lay the patient carefully onto the bed. |
|
This hen doesn't lay. |
|
Lay a fire. |
|
Lay the foundation for a new health care plan. |
|
Lay a responsibility on someone. |
|
adj. | |
A lay opinion as to the cause of the disease. |
|
The lay ministry. |
|
As religious people, clergy and lay leaders, we are mandated by faith to stand for justice in our common civic life. |
|
A dog jumped onto the chair and lay motionless for five minutes. | |
A cat jumped onto the chair and lay motionless. | |
You're pretty good with the lay of the land. | |
She really is a good lay. | |
It surprised me that platypus lay eggs. | |
I'll try to get a lay of the land before I start contributing. | |
To his eyes all seemed beautiful, but to me a tinge of melancholy lay upon the country-side, which bore so clearly the mark of the waning year. | |
As when a snake, that through the winter's cold / lay swoln and hidden in the ground from sight, / gorged with rank herbs, forth issues to the light, / and sleek with shining youth and newly drest, / wreathing its slippery volumes, towers upright / and, glorying, to the sunbeam rears its breast, / and darts a three-forked tongue, and points a flaming crest. | |
Flies lay eggs. | |
So it came to pass in the evening, that quails coming up, covered the camp: and in the morning a dew lay round about the camp. | |
Yanni shut the door and went lay on his bed. | |
Everywhere lay bottles, seed husks, and other litter. |