- lay charges
- British
to officially accuse someone of a crime. A more common phrase is bring chargeslay charges against:
Criminal charges will be laid tomorrow.
No charges were ever laid against her.
English dictionary. 2014.
Criminal charges will be laid tomorrow.
No charges were ever laid against her.
English dictionary. 2014.
lay charges — british phrase to officially accuse someone of a crime. A more common phrase is bring charges Criminal charges will be laid tomorrow. lay charges against: No charges were ever laid against her. Thesaurus: to accuse someone of a crimesynonym… … Useful english dictionary
lay charges against — index denounce (inform against) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
lay — I [[t]le͟ɪ[/t]] VERB AND NOUN USES ♦♦ lays, laying, laid (In standard English, the form lay is also the past tense of the verb in some meanings. In informal English, people sometimes use the word lay instead of … English dictionary
lay — lay1 [ leı ] (past tense and past participle laid [ leıd ] ) verb *** ▸ 1 put down flat/carefully ▸ 2 push egg from body ▸ 3 plan and prepare ▸ 4 lie ▸ 5 prepare table for meal ▸ + PHRASES 1. ) transitive lay on/in/across/against to put something … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
lay — I UK [leɪ] / US verb Word forms lay : present tense I/you/we/they lay he/she/it lays present participle laying past tense laid UK [leɪd] / US past participle laid *** Collocations: Lay means to put something in a particular place or position: I… … English dictionary
lay — I verb 1) Curtis laid the newspaper on the table Syn: put, place, set, put down, set down, deposit, rest, situate, locate, position; informal stick, dump, park, plunk 2) the act laid the foundation for the new system … Thesaurus of popular words
lay — lay1 W2S1 [leı] v the past tense of ↑lie 1 lay 2 lay2 v past tense and past participle laid [leıd] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(put somebody/something down)¦ 2 lay bricks/carpet/concrete/cables etc 3¦(bird/insect etc)¦ 4¦(table)¦ 5 lay the foundations/ … Dictionary of contemporary English
lay — lay1 /lay/, v., laid, laying, n. v.t. 1. to put or place in a horizontal position or position of rest; set down: to lay a book on a desk. 2. to knock or beat down, as from an erect position; strike or throw to the ground: One punch laid him low.… … Universalium
lay — 1 /leI/ verb the past tense of lie 1 2 verb past tense and past participle laid 1 PUT SB/STH DOWN (transitive always + adv/prep) to put someone or something down carefully into a flat position: lay sth in/on/under etc: Laying my coat carefully on … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
Lay, Kenneth — ▪ 2007 American businessman (b. April 15, 1942, Tyrone, Mo. d. July 5, 2006, Aspen, Colo.), rose from humble beginnings to become chairman and chief executive of Enron Corp. at one time the seventh largest corporation in the U.S. but saw… … Universalium