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Titiwangsa Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

"Let's walk aside/sidewalk.“

Jack and I take a walk around home. We are walking on the road.
A car is coming, "Let's walk aside/sidewalk.“

What do we call for that? Some house area has sidewalk but some doesn't.
  

Top answer

If there is a walkway, you would certainly say: Let us walk on the sidewalk. If there isn't one, you could say several things: Let us walk on the side of the street. ) Let us get out of the street (You are out of the street, but you don't name where you are now to walk).

  • If there is a walkway, you would certainly say: Let us walk on the sidewalk.
  • If there isn't one, you could say several things: Let us walk on the side of the street.
  • ) Let us get out of the street (You are out of the street, but you don't name where you are now to walk).
  • Let us walk on the shoulder.
  • (You are now out of the street on its border).
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1 Answers
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If there is a walkway, you would certainly say: Let us walk on the sidewalk.

If there isn't one, you could say several things:

Let us walk on the side of the street. (You are still in the street, but at the edge.)

Let us get out of the street (You are out of the street, but you don't name where you are now to walk).

Let us walk on the shoulder.

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