Showing posts with label lay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lay. Show all posts

Thursday, March 7, 2013

lay, lai, lei

Lay or lay means to set something in a recumbent or horizontal position--
She went upstairs to lay out her clothes for tomorrow.
You can lay your coats on the chair in the hall.

Lay also means to deposit or set a thing on a surface, or on another thing or person, literally or figuratively--
He learned to lay bricks from his father.
We shouldn't lay all of the blame on him.

Lay or lay also describes a secular person, as opposed to a member of the clergy--
He hopes to start a lay ministry that will reach out to the homeless.
The meeting will be for the clergy and any interested lay persons.

Lay also means a short poem--
He wrote a poem meant to resemble an old-fashioned lay.
The class is reading 'The Lay of the Last Minstrel."

Lai or lai ( rhymes with lay ) means a kind of medieval poem or song, usually about love or romance--
Our French class is reading a medieval lai about Lancelot and Guinevere.
This lai was originally written in medieval french, so it loses something in the translation.

Lei or lei ( rhymes with lay, or pronounced lay ee ) means a garland of flowers, as worn in Hawaii--
He was greeted with a lei on his arrival in Hawaii.
Each guest wore a paper lei and a flowered shirt.

Now that you know that, you can say--
"While the lei of orchids lay on the table, he began to compose a lai in honor of their trip to Hawaii."