Lay vs. Lie: Miley, Sufjan, and Grammatical Snafus in Pop Stardom
Singer-songwriter Sufjan Stevens
wrote an open letter to Miley Cyrus addressing her use of the word laying in
her song “Get It Right.” The lyric in question: “I been laying in this bed all
night long.” Before addressing the grammatical sin of “I been,” Sufjan explains
that Miley should have used the word lying in place of laying. What’s the
difference between the two? Lying has several senses, but in this case it comes
from the verb lie meaning “to be in a horizontal, recumbent, or prostrate
position.” Lie is an intransitive verb, which means it does not require an
object. Laying comes from the the word lay meaning “to put or place in a
horizontal position or position of rest.” Lay is a transitive verb, which means
it requires a direct object. Since Miley is not placing an object, such as a
foam finger or an oversized teddy bear on her bed in this lyric, lying would
indeed be the correct word choice here. That said, Miley is not the first
musician to get this wrong. In fact, pop music has a long tradition of mixing
up lay and lie, and we listeners have a long tradition of overlooking this and
many other grammatical deviations in the name of artistic license. For
instance, Bob Dylan’s beloved song “Lay Lady Lay” is grammatically incorrect.
Following the reasoning above, the correct lyric and song title would be “Lie,
Lady, Lie.” But “lay lady lay” rhymes with the affectionate refrain “stay lady
stay.” Had Dylan written “lie lady lie,” what would the corresponding line be?
“Cry lady cry”? This minor tweak could have resulted in a very different song.
One reason folks have a hard time keeping these two verbs straight is that lay
is the past tense of lie. However, as far as we can tell, “Lay Lady Lay” is
written in the present tense, and so is Eric Clapton’s “Lay Down Sally,” which
commits the same crime. The grammatically correct phrase would be “Lie down,
Sally,” unless Clapton (or a third party) was holding Sally and physically
placing her down. But the sound of the word pairings was the priority here,
just as with “Lay Lady Lay.” Clapton wants Sally to lay probably because he
also wants her to stay, no matter how grammatically incorrect that proposition
is. It’s not all recumbent blunders out there in the kingdom of popular music.
Pulled from the same era as the aforementioned classic songs, Simon and
Garfunkel’s “Bridge Over Troubled Water” boasts correct, if nonstandard, usage
of lay in the line “Like a bridge over troubled water, I will lay me down.”
This usage works because lay takes the object me. And now for a challenge: Snow
Patrol’s 2006 hit song “Chasing Cars” includes the following line: “If I lay
here, if I just lay here, would you lie with me and just forget the world?” Can
you spot what’s happening with lay and lie in this example? Have you heard
abuses or proper uses of lay and lie on the radio? More interestingly, do oversights
such as Miley’s drive you up a wall, or does a little grammatical fudging do a
ditty good?
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