"Footpath" and "sidewalk" are terms used interchangeably in many regions, but there's no significant difference between them. Both refer to pedestrian pathways alongside roads, providing safe walking spaces. The choice of term depends on regional language preferences, with "footpath" commonly used in British English and "sidewalk" in American English.
pavement, sidewalk
In American English, the term used for "footpath" is typically "sidewalk." In British English, "footpath" often refers to a path for pedestrians, while "pavement" can also be used in British contexts to mean the sidewalk adjacent to a road. These differences reflect variations in terminology between the two dialects.
The term applies to letting your dog leave its feces on a sidewalk. It is a violation of the law.
A sidewalk is a paved area for pedestrians which is usually beside a street or road. A sidewalk is sometimes known as a pavement, footpath, footway or platform.
Hello I deleted the answer... Your welcome DB
Curb has many meanings, the most common of which is probably the raised edge of a raised footpath or roadway.
What is a footpath? A footpath is path for people to walk on.
The duration of Care of Footpath is 2.25 hours.
At obvious glance I see many differences, fins vs. legs, walking vs swimming, sidewalk vs open water, fish vs human. But how about we put a fish on the sidewalk and a human under water and we see first hand.
Care of Footpath was created on 2006-02-26.
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The noun footpath is a singular, common, concrete, compound noun.