"lain"? no, no, no. "laid".
'lain' is the past participle of the past tense 'lay'.
'laid' is the past tense of the present tense 'lay' (like "lay an egg"; therefore "has laid an egg" by, err ... 'something related to the chicken'
First time I took my husband to go grocery shopping he had NO CLUE he had to check shit.
Like when will the milk expires.
Are the eggs cracked.
See if the fruit and veggies are ripe or spoiled.
If the box/bag of noodles are broken.
When does the cheese expire.
Check how soft is the bread
(We have to check on when the dairy expires mainly for our daughter she has a illness since birth.)
When I was going around doing this he said you take to long I said no I am doing this to get the best food. It isn't like picking picking up a frozen pizza. With fresh produce you have to take your time.
After that and he saw how much better the food was after he always checks stuff like I do lmao.
'lain' is the past participle of the past tense 'lay'.
'laid' is the past tense of the present tense 'lay' (like "lay an egg"; therefore "has laid an egg" by, err ... 'something related to the chicken'
Like when will the milk expires.
Are the eggs cracked.
See if the fruit and veggies are ripe or spoiled.
If the box/bag of noodles are broken.
When does the cheese expire.
Check how soft is the bread
(We have to check on when the dairy expires mainly for our daughter she has a illness since birth.)
When I was going around doing this he said you take to long I said no I am doing this to get the best food. It isn't like picking picking up a frozen pizza. With fresh produce you have to take your time.
After that and he saw how much better the food was after he always checks stuff like I do lmao.