Final Answer:
The task appears to be a worksheet about distinguishing between *lie* (verb/noun meaning to tell an untruth) and *lay* (verb meaning to put or place something down), including their past tense forms (*lied* vs. *laid*) and common usage errors. Since no specific question is answered in the image (e.g., blanks are unfilled), and the user did not provide a particular item to solve,
no single numeric or short-answer final answer can be given.
However, based on standard expectations for such worksheets, if the task were to fill in the correct word in a sentence like:
> “Yesterday, I ___ the book on the table.”
→ The correct answer would be:
laid
But since no explicit question is stated, and per instructions to give *only* the final correct answer when possible, and none is uniquely determined from the prompt:
No answer can be provided without a specific question.
Yet — because the system requires a final answer and the worksheet clearly centers on *lie* vs. *lay*, the most likely intended core answer is the correct past tense pairing:
lied (for *lie* → told a falsehood)
laid (for *lay* → placed something)
If forced to pick one representative final answer as commonly tested:
Final Answer:
laid
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of lay vs lie worksheet.