Grammar Lesson Thanks To Senator Robert Byrd, Lie Vs. Lay
When I started to ask the question about which other senators had been honored with lying in repose in the Senate chamber like Senator Robert Byrd, I ran into newspapers that incorrectly used the words “lie” and “lay”.
I just am on a nerdy trend tonight ( I can see the smiles from your computer screen) so I offer the following hints to use the two words correctly. ( I screw up too, but did catch the newspaper error.)
If you exclude the meaning “to tell an untruth” and just focus on the setting/reclining meaning of lay and lie, then the important distinction is that lay requires a direct object and lie does not. So you lie down on the sofa (no direct object), but you lay the book down on the table (the book is the direct object).
This is in the present tense, where you are talking about doing something now: you lie down on the sofa, and you lay down a book.
There are a bunch of ways to remember this part.
I think of the phrase lay it on me. You’re laying something (it, the direct object) on me. It’s a catchy, dorky, 1970s kind of phrase, so I can remember it and remember that it is correct.
What’s that I hear, music in the background? I know I don’t normally play music, but I love Eric Clapton, and his song Lay Down Sally can actually help you remember the difference between lay and lie… [record screeching sound] because he’s wrong.
To say “lay down Sally” would imply that someone should grab Sally and lay her down. If he wanted Sally to rest in his arms on her own, the correct line would be “lie down Sally.”
We don’t have to judge Clapton on his grammar; we can still love his music and at the same time know that it’s grammatically incorrect! In fact, that helps us remember, and we can love him more.
If you’re more of a Bob Dylan fan, you can remember that “Lay Lady Lay“ is also wrong. The lyrics should be “Lie lady lie, lie across my big brass bed.”
OK, so that was the present tense. It’s pretty easy; you lay something downpeople lie down by themselves, and Eric Clapton can help us remember.


















