Answer:
The nutritious fruit and the tree it comes from are central to daily life in the rainforest. The fruit is eaten ... Reporter Annie Murphy has our story
Explanation:
https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=128328822
These are two different verbs: one means: to be positioned horizontally (lie) and the other to position something else horizontally, to put something down (lay)
They sound similar and have a meaning connected to being horizontal, that's one reason for their confusion.
Make sure you also don't confuse their past tenses:
Lay: laid
lie: lay
Yes, Lay is the present tense of one of them and the past of the other: that's the other reason for their confusion!
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