can someone please explain the meaning of the lines :-

" Though as for that passing there 

Had worn them really about the same, ..."

i get a little confused reading these lines in the poem .

 i have asked this question for the second time . can someone please answer ?

Hello,
 
@Apoorva, your friends Madhu and Anamika have given the right answers. Precisely, the correct answer can be written as:
The speaker has come to a fork in a path in the woods. It's fall, and the leaves are turning colors. He's unsure which way to go, and wishes he could go both ways. He looks down one path as far as he can see, but then he decides to take the other. He thinks the path he decides to take is not quite as worn as the other one, but really, the paths are about the same, and the fallen leaves on both look pretty fresh.

Hope the above explanation helped you with your query.
 
@Madhu and Anamika, well done! Happy surfing!
Cheers!

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I guess the meaning of these lines is that :-

  THE PEOPLE WHO PASSES THROUGH THAT WAY FACE SITUATIONS ABOUT THE SAME...!!!

hope this helps you

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  Robert Frost is basically saying they both were worn down, although he said the second road was untouched which means that the people had passed through both the roads equally.

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thanks !!

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Thank u !!

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