[go: up one dir, main page]

See also: Laye

English

edit

Verb

edit

laye (third-person singular simple present layes, present participle laying, simple past and past participle layed)

  1. Obsolete spelling of lay.
    • 1597, King James I, Daemonologie.[1]:
      Ye must first remember to laye the ground, that I tould you before: which is, that it is no power inherent in the circles, or in the holines of the names of God blasphemouslie vsed: nor in whatsoeuer rites or ceremonies at that time vsed, that either can raise any infernall spirit, or yet limitat him perforce within or without these circles.
    • 1775, Various, Continental Monthly, Vol. I, No. V, May, 1862[2]:
      He was a wight of grisly fronte, And muckle berd ther was upon 't, His lockes farre down did laye: Ful wel he setten on his hors, Thatte fony felaws called Mors, For len it was and grai.
    • 1806, Walter Scott, Minstrelsy of the Scottish border (3rd ed) (1 of 3)[3]:
      Aftir that, my seid lord retournyng to the campe, wold in nowise bee lodged in the same, but where he laye the furst nyght.

Noun

edit

laye (plural layes)

  1. Obsolete spelling of lay (a song).

Anagrams

edit

Pali

edit

Alternative forms

edit

Noun

edit

laye m

  1. inflection of laya (a brief measure of time):
    1. locative singular
    2. accusative plural