mira para ambos lados antes de crusar una calle
The sentence, "They all are looking both ways before crossing?" uses the verb "look" in the present progressive(alternatively called the "present continuous") tense. The corresponding simple present tense sentence would be "They look both ways before crossing".
No. This is why so many dogs are killed by cars.
I wouldn't recommend jaywalking, but if you need to, please look both ways before crossing the street.
"Look both ways before crossing the street." "Don't talk to strangers." "Brush your teeth before bed."
We train our dogs to look both ways before crossing the road.
It is sensible to look both ways before crossing a road. It is not sensible to close your eyes and then cross the road.
if you don't look both ways before crossing the street, you could get run over.
Both
I wouldn't recommend jaywalking, but if you need to, please look both ways before crossing the street.
sternocleidomastoid
Geese may only cross at the crosswalk and must obey all signs. They should of course look both ways before crossing, but that's not actually a law.
you must look both ways left and right