The aisle...
The bride walks down (or up) the central passage way not the Aisles (typically these flank the pews and are called the North and South Aisles)
aisle
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.
Many brides make their way to the altar to the traditional "Bridal Chorus" from Wagner's Lohengrin and exit to Mendelssohn's "Wedding March" from A Midsummer Night's Dream. Some brides do walk down the aisle to Pachebel's "Canon in D."
A bride can choose most any song to walk down the aisle to as long as she is happy with it. Some prefer to stay traditional and go with the "Bridal Chorus", "Wedding March" or "Pachelbel's Cannon in D". Some more modern brides prefer to walk down the aisle to a song that is meaningful to them in some way.
Normally, yes. That detail is not written in stone.
the brides veil is drggind down on the foor
1772 but then it broke down so it was at 2001
they walk down with there father
Walk Down the Street was created in 2005.
Walk Down the Road was created in 2009.
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.