when atticus walked down the aisle, everybody made way for him.
In "To Kill a Mockingbird," it is Boo Radley who walks down the middle aisle and leaves a note for Atticus. He does this as a gesture of gratitude towards Atticus for defending his children, Scout and Jem.
The spelling aisle is correct (e.g. The bride walked down the aisle to meet her groom).
He wanted to go home the short way
Calpurnia walks down the aisle carrying a note to Atticus from Aunt Alexandra saying that Jem and Scout have been missing for the better part of the day. That help you?
As I walked down the grocery aisle on Esmee Isle, I felt a weight lifted off my chest.
If you mean then it could be something like: I'll walk down the aisle of the church. If you mean ill, then it could be something: The bride was feeling ill as she walked down the aisle.
Since Kate did not become estranged from her parents until after the children were born, it's reasonable to assume her father, Kenton Kreider, walked her down the aisle. Additionally, the video tape footage taken at the wedding of Jon and Kate has been shown on Jon & Kate+8 with the face of the man who walked Kate down the aisle electronically obscured. This has further strengthened the assumption that it was her father who walked her down the aisle.
'The customers walked up and down the aisles of the supermarket.'
Ave Maria, she walked down the aisle at her wedding to that song.
No! She and her groom, Mike Fischer, walked down the aisle together!
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."
An Aisle is a space for people to walk down