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legst

Legst is the second-person singular present tense form of the German verb legen, meaning to lay or put. It is used when the subject of the sentence is informal and addressed as du (you). As a verb form, legst cannot stand alone as a complete entry; it functions within a sentence to indicate the action performed by the subject.

In German, legen is a regular verb in its conjugation pattern. The present tense forms are: ich

Usage and distinction: legst appears in everyday speech whenever you say what you are having someone do

In summary, legst is a common verb form used to describe the action of placing something by

lege,
du
legst,
er/sie/es
legt,
wir
legen,
ihr
legt,
sie/Sie
legen.
The
simple
past
forms
include
legtest
for
du,
while
the
present
perfect
is
formed
with
haben
plus
gelegt
(du
hast
gelegt).
The
noun
form
related
to
the
action
is
das
Legen,
meaning
the
act
of
laying
or
putting.
or
where
you
are
placing
something.
For
example:
Du
legst
das
Buch
auf
den
Tisch.
It
is
important
to
distinguish
legen
(to
lay)
from
liegen
(to
lie,
as
in
being
located).
legen
is
transitive
and
takes
a
direct
object
(what
is
laid),
while
liegen
is
intransitive
and
describes
location
without
a
direct
object
(where
something
is
located).
The
second-person
singular
form
lies
alongside
other
present-tense
forms
such
as
ich
lege
and
er
legt.
addressing
someone
as
you,
and
it
sits
within
the
broader
conjugation
of
legen.
See
also
legen,
liegen,
and
das
Legen
for
related
forms
and
concepts.