dans l'escalier.
Nous avons monté les escaliers.
sur l'escalier
As my old scout leader used to say, along the corridor then up the stairs. x = the corridor or horizontal axis y = stairs or the vertical axis
In English, nouns typically do not have gender. However, in some languages like Spanish or French, nouns can be masculine or feminine. In those contexts, "stairs" would be considered feminine in Spanish ("escalera") and can vary in gender in French as "escaliers" (masculine) or "escalier" (singular, masculine). In English, we simply refer to stairs without any gender classification.
How do you say 593,493,794 in french.
to go up the stairs is 'monter les escaliers' in French.
the landing (up the stairs) is called 'le palier' in French.
stairs are 'les escaliers' in French. You may also use it in the singular: l'escalier.
Nous avons monté les escaliers.
sur l'escalier
il n'ya pas d'escalier
It depends. If you're describing someone who is actually standing on a step or walking up or down the stairs, you would say "on the stairs". If a person were standing in front of the stairs, you could say "at the stairs" or "at the staircase".
Stair is translated 'escalier' in French. The stairwell is 'la cage d'escalier'.
The stairs are 'les escaliers' in French.
some animals are afrade of heghts
The French word for stairs is "escalier."
Arriba means upstair while abajo means down stairs