walking with a stroller

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ripley

Senior Member
Joined
Sep 25, 2004
Member Type
Student or Learner
Native Language
Italian
Home Country
Italy
Current Location
Italy
Hi, I'd like to know if the following sentences are ok. Thanks
Context: You are pushing a stroller and you are talking to you baby
Now let's get (walk?) off the pavement and cross the road at (on?with?) the zebra crossings; let's get (walk) onto the pavement again
 
Hi, I'd like to know if the following sentences are [STRIKE]ok[/STRIKE] OK/okay. Thanks.

Context: You are pushing a stroller and you are talking to your baby.

Now let's get [STRIKE](walk?)[/STRIKE] off the pavement and cross the road at [STRIKE](on?with?)[/STRIKE] the zebra [STRIKE]crossings[/STRIKE] crossing, then let's get [STRIKE](walk)[/STRIKE] onto the pavement again.

See above.
 
Thanks for your help. Do the sentences sound natural? Would a native speaker mom talk like this?
 
It's very wordy so I can't imagine a native speaker saying it. Generally, zebra crossings lead from one pavement, across a road, to another pavement so there is no need to be so specific. I imagine a parent would say something like "We need to cross [the road] at the zebra crossing".
 
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