they walk down with there father
If you want him to walk you down the aisle, go ahead. It is fine.
The brides hangs onto her father's arm (if the father can not attend or is deceased) then an uncle; good friend of the family or a brother can take the father's place. After the maid of honor and bridesmaids are down the aisle then the bride comes down the aisle slowly on her father's arm and her father leads her to the left of the groom at the altar where the minister or priest is standing.
Since the father of the bride walks the bride down the aisle, who else would do it?
Nothing "happens" it is her choice as to who walks her down, it could be her brother, sister, mother, her own son or any other relative she chooses.
An Aisle is a space for people to walk down
The aisle...
The aisle, pronounced iyal.
to show that he is already ready in handling her daughter to the responsibilty of the man that she will be living for till their death. it's a traditional way or custom that the father will walk down her daughter in the aisle because he was the one who has raised her daughter and it is the right time to handle her daughter out of her responsibilty.
Because at the end of the day your father is giving you away to a different family but if you don't live with your father it is likely to be your brother but obviously if you don't have a brother it would probably be a close male friend but who ever walks the bride down the aisle it would be a male.
Sure! Here's a sentence using the homophones "aisle" and "I'll": "If you wait in the bridal aisle, I'll be right there with you."
I think if you have an Older brother he can walk you up the aisle , if you dont have a brother than a close Male Family member can