A flat-top stopper must be laid with its flat sides on the table to ensure stability and prevent it from rolling or tipping over. This orientation maximizes its contact with the surface, providing a secure base that minimizes the risk of accidental spills or breakage. Additionally, positioning the stopper this way can facilitate easier access to its contents when needed.
So that whatever leftover gunk happens to be on the table doesn't get all over the part of the stopper that goes into the bottle, contaminating the contents.
Its called a net.
A graph that shows data in a laid out form.A
A standard lifejacket
So they don't roll.
So that you don't contaminate the stopper with anything on the table. Also, if you lay it on it's side, there's a possibility that it rolls off the table and breaks.
A flat-top stopper must be laid with its flat sides on the table to ensure stability and prevent it from rolling or tipping over. This orientation maximizes its contact with the surface, providing a secure base that minimizes the risk of accidental spills or breakage. Additionally, positioning the stopper this way can facilitate easier access to its contents when needed.
So that whatever leftover gunk happens to be on the table doesn't get all over the part of the stopper that goes into the bottle, contaminating the contents.
It was named Table Mountain by Antonio Sladanha in 1503 because it's flat top resembles that of a table. Folk tales have it that when it is misty on the mountain it is as if the giants have laid a table cloth on their table.. :)
Your girlfriend is like a brick, flat on both sides and laid by mexicans.
I laid my book on the table. Laid is a regular verb. The forms are lay laid laid.
A meal laid out on a long table is often referred to as a "feast" or a "banquet".
She laid the book on the table before leaving the room.
The present perfect tense of "lay" is "has/have laid." For example: "I have laid the book on the table."
The manager laid the papers on his table is the correct past tense. (to lay)The word "lay" is the past tense of the intransitive verb (to lie, to lie down), e.g. The manager lay on the table (not the papers).
"Laid" is the past tense and past participle of the verb "to lay," which means to put something down. "Laid" is used when referring to an action that has already happened, while "lay" is used in the present tense. For example, "She laid the book on the table yesterday" or "She is laying the book on the table now."