The french word for walking is 'marcher', in its infinitive form.
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The cast of Marcher - 2009 includes: Sharif Andoura as Le joggeur
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The duration of La meilleure façon de marcher is 1.37 hours.
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La meilleure façon de marcher was created on 1976-03-03.
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marcher sur is not what I am looking for, please help me
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The soldiers marched to Philadelphia, then they marcher to Valley Forge.
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faites-vous = do you, are you doing / making
aimez-vous marcher dans le Clair de lune = do you like to walk in the moonlight
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New Mexico
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j'aime marcher (I fought valiantly in battle)
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According to Oxford - Origin Fr. marchez/ or marchons/, imper. of marcher 'to advance'
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Est-ce qu'elle aime marcher? = "Does she like to walk?"
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The French phrase "je n'aime pas marcher pendant des heures" translates to "I don't like to walk for hours" in English.
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"To keep pace" is one English equivalent of the French phrase marcher du même pas.
Specifically, the verb marcher means "to walk." The word du combines the preposition de with the masculine singular definite article le to mean "in the, of the, with the." The adjective même means "same." The masculine noun pas means "step."
The pronunciation will be "mahr-shey dyoo mehm pah" in French.
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ture
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You have have go be a very good marcher and good at playing instruments i think
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Melvin V. Marcher has written:
'Ground-water geology of the Dickson, Lawrenceburg, and Waverly areas in the western Highland Rim, Tennessee' -- subject(s): Water-supply, Groundwater
'Ground-water geology of the Dickson, Lawrenceburg, and Waverly areas in the western Highland Rim, Tennessee' -- subject(s): Water-supply, Groundwater
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I would first use (á pied)
As a verb it can be:
1.marcher
2.traverser
3.aller á pied
as a noun it can be:
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Mid america would be so displeased you posted professor carter's question lol.
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because there male that about sums it up i mean female are way more Marcher then males its just in each others nature i guess. :)
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The word is actually 'SA MARCHE' and it's from the verb Marcher. What it literally means in the Kitchen is On Order/Make one/two or how ever many.
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You would say "nous sommes allés nous promener" in French.
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I'm walking in Paris: je marche dans Paris
I like walking in Paris: j'aime marcher dans Paris (infinitive)
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1.Becuse there usually more marcher 2.they think there better than you 3.there jealous 4. you'd understand if you had a younger sibling
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Marcher=To walk. Present Je marche Tu Marches Il/elle/on Marche Nous Marchons Vous Marchez Ils/elles Marchent Participle Past of marcher: Singular Masculine marché Plural Masculine marchés Singular Feminine marchée Plural Feminine marchées
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une marche is a step on a staircase, e.g. "attention à la marche" -- "watch your step"
it could also be a form of the verb marcher. je marche, il marche -- I walk, he walks
Improve by crisdean.
Billy is right but the verb "marcher" can be also used :
for a device :
Est-que l'ascenceur marche ? - Does the lift work ?
in business
Les affaires marchent-elles ? Is the business going well ?
For a person
Il lui a raconté un mensonge et elle a marché : He told her fibs and she naively believed him.
As a noun : marche can also be the military "march"
A expression in french with marcher
Elle te fait marcher : She's pulling your leg
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je suis allé (allée for a girl) me promener, je suis allé marcher, je suis allé faire un tour
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to step = marcher,
a step = un pas (a great step for humanity = un grand pas pour l'humanit
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