ashi no yoko
"Football (soccer) fan" is an English equivalent of the French phrase fan de foot. The pronunciation of the masculine singular prepositional phrase -- which translates literally as "fan of foot(ball, soccer)" -- will be "fa duh foot" in French.
"Foot race" is an English equivalent of the French phrase course à pied. The competition-related phrase translates literally into English as "race on foot." The pronunciation will be "koor-sa-pyey" in French.
"Foot" in English is pied in French.
Foot = Piede
Football americano is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "American football." The masculine singular phrase also may be shortened to just foot or football. The pronunciation will be "FOOT-bal-la-MEY-ree-KA-no" in Italian.
"Foot soup" is a literal English equivalent of the Spanish phrase sopa de pata. The pronunciation of the feminine singular phrase -- which refers to a beloved cow's foot dish in El Salvador -- will be "SO-pa they PA-ta" in Spanish.
"The football field" and "the soccer field" are English equivalents of the French phrase le terrain de foot. The masculine singular phrase also translates as "the football ground," "the football pitch." "the soccer ground" and "the soccer pitch" in English. The pronunciation will be "le teh-rehd foot" in Alsatian and Cevenol French.
"Soccer in the park" is an English equivalent of the French phrase foot au parc. The masculine singular word foot serves as an abbreviation of the English loan-word football, for American football and for European soccer. The pronunciation will be "foo-to par" in Alsatian and Cevenol French.
"I played soccer" is an English equivalent of the French phrase J'ai joué au foot. The sentence also translates as "I've played soccer" or "I have played soccer" in English. the pronunciation will be "zeh zhwey o foot" in Alsatian and Cevenol French.
Roughly translated it is hand, foot, and mind.
Le pied in French is "the foot" in English.
"pied" is the French word for foot.