It would be "parfois on joue ensemble" instead of "parfois on jouons ensemble" because "on" is a singular pronoun and therefore requires the third-person singular form of "jouer", "joue".
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)
"Sometimes or..." is a literal English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase parfois ou... . The pronunciation will be "par-fwa oo" in French.
elle joue
Or play the troop of Moliere
Generically an ensemble is a group of things (usually but not always musicians). In music a ensemble can also be a:- duet, trio, quartet, quintet, sextet, septet, octet, nonet, etc.
jouons ! = let's play! - nous jouons = we play / are playing
The verb to play is jouer. This is a regular verb so follows the normal 'er' endings: Je joue Tu joues Elle/Il/On joue Nous jouons Vous jouez Elles/Ils jouent So for 'you' play, this can be said both in singular form and plural. For one person it is, Tu joues And for saying it to several people, Vous jouez
we do
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)
Nous jouons
nous jouons
je joue pour : I'm playing for... il, elle joue pour : he, she is playing for...
Joue pas was created in 1989-07.
-er verbs are verbs whose infinitive (form you'd find in the dictionary) end in -er Depending on the subject (who is doing the verb) the endings change from -er for example: jouer = to play je joue = I play tu joues = you play il joue = he plays elle joue = she plays nous jouons = we play vous jouez = they play ils jouent = they play elles jouent = they (fem) play SO THE ENDINGS ARE je ......e tu ......es il ......e elle ......e nous ......ons vous ......ez ils ......ent elles ......ent
Je joue means I play (a game, a sport, a musical instrument, the fool). Note. Ma joue is the cheek on my face.
Moi Je Joue means i play
Je joue golf