"I play soccer!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Je joue au football! The masculine singular noun football represents an English loan-word whose meaning for French language-speakers is either American football or soccer elsewhere. The pronunciation will be "zhuh zhoo oh foot-bal" in Alsatian and Cevenol French.
"I play soccer!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Je joue au foot! The masculine singular noun serves as an abbreviated form of the English loan-word football, for football in the United States of America and for soccer elsewhere. The pronunciation will be "zhuh zhoo oh foot" in Alsatian and Cevenol French.
"When the weather is nice, I play soccer" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Quand il fait beau, je joue au foot. The sentence translates literally as "When it makes beautiful (weather), I play at soccer" in English. The pronunciation will be "kaw-teel feh bo zhuh zhoo o foot" in Alsatian and Cevenol French.
On joue au foot in French is "One plays football" in English.
Je vais jouer au football. Hope this helps!
I play football
il joue au foot, il joue au football.
"je joue au football le lundi / je joue au foot les lundis" (both grammatically correct)
je joue au foot dans le jardin
Je joue au netball. (same word and pronunciation than in english) Usually sports in French keep their English name.
She is playing/plays football
Play in french is jouer.
"He plays soccer" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Il joue au foot. The masculine singular word footserves as a shortened form of the English loan-word football, to designate American football in the United States and soccer elsewhere. The pronunciation will be "eel zhoo o foot" in Alsatian and Cevenol French.
"I play," "I play at" and "I play with" are English equivalents of the incomplete French phrase Je joue au... . Context makes clear whether it's a diversion or a game such as chess and dolls. The pronunciation will be "zhuh zhoo o" in Alsatian and Cevenol French.
It means "when the weather is fine, I play tennis".
"Cheek" and "Play!" are English equivalents of the French word joue. Context makes clear whether the word functions as a feminine singular noun (case 1) or as the second person informal singular imperative "you" (example 2). The pronunciation will be "zhoo" in Alsatian and Cevenol French.
plays basketball is translated in French to "joue au basketball"
j'ai joué au foot means 'I played football' in French (understand 'soccer' if you live in the US)
It depends if you're talking about the verb to play :je joue (=I play)il joue (=he plays)elle joue (=she plays)on joue (=we play)Or the body part la joue (=the cheek)
"je joue au football le lundi / je joue au foot les lundis" (both grammatically correct)
je joue au foot dans le jardin
In French I play football is: Je joue au foot(ball) Hope it helped. If you need help on French I can probably do it.
la joue (fem.) is the cheek (part of the face) in French.
Feminine describes the gender of the French word joue. The feminine singular noun in question may be preceded by the feminine singular definite article la ("the") and will translate as "cheek" in English. The pronunciation will be "zhoo" in French.