The question is: prove that an infinite finitely generated group $G$ contains an isometric copy of $\mathbb{R}$, i.e., contains a bi-infinite geodesic ($G$ is equipped with the word metric).
I do not even know what I have to prove. It does not make sense to me. The word metric of $G$ assumes values in the natural numbers. How could there be an isometry between a subgraph of the Cayley graph of $G$ and the real line $\mathbb{R}$.
I am really confused.
I found this question here (sheet 6, ex. 1).