If you means one person and informal: souhaites-tu aller te promener après ? or souhaites-tu aller faire une promenade après?
If you means several person or is formal: souhaitez-vous aller vous promener après ? or souhaitez-vous faire une promenade après?
walking in french is : à pied
I chose Bill for our team, but afterwards I wished I had chosen Bob instead. I went to get my hair cut, and afterwards I stopped for some ice cream.
The French phrase "je n'aime pas marcher pendant des heures" translates to "I don't like to walk for hours" in English.
I would first use (á pied)As a verb it can be:1.marcher2.traverser3.aller á piedas a noun it can be:promenadebaladechemintourdémarchealléemarche à piedtrottoiralluretour à piedconduiteparadedégageprocessionmétiermilieu socialcomportementprofession
Strut like in Saturday Night Fever. Stroll. Actually these three words all have nearly the same meaning. These definitions are from the Concise Oxford English Dictionary stroll - verb - walk in a leisurely way. amble - verb - walk or move at a leisurely pace. saunter - verb - walk in a slow, relaxed manner.
something like this i would suppose... promenade vers arrière it means walk towards back
Est-ce qu'elle aime marcher? = "Does she like to walk?"
if you get kissed by someone i think it is a sure sign that they like you but i don't know why anyone would just awkwardly walk away afterwards. at least talk to the person after kissing them before walking away next time.
Afterwards is a connecting adverb with the meaning "later" applied to a time or event. e.g. "He ate supper, and afterwards went for a walk."
Would you like to take a walk with me?
walking in french is : à pied
"Would you like to walk with me on a trail through the lovely forest?"
I chose Bill for our team, but afterwards I wished I had chosen Bob instead. I went to get my hair cut, and afterwards I stopped for some ice cream.
There are no helping verbs in the French language. (remember 4th grade.. am, is. are... do, does, did..)I walk. -------------Je marcheI am walking.-----Je marcheI would walk-----Je marcheI did walk.---------Je ne marche. (NO, ne does not mean 'did', it just informs you that the verb happened in the past )--shel
If you mean to ask "how do you say 'walk' in French?" the verb is "aller au pied" if you are walking to somewhere and it is "se promener" if you are just walking without a destination in mind.As for "walking in french", I am not exactly sure in what way French people walk that is different from non-French people. From what I have seen, French people walk the same way as everyone else.
Yes. It's about a 20 minute walk. But, in this weather, it might not be a good idea - you don't know what the weather might be like when the show is over. Plan (financially) on getting the LUAS or a taxi afterwards
fish would like to walk with a nother fish if could walk