No.
No. It's a noun (He is a leading tennis coach.) or verb (He will coach at the new tennis club.)
going to hit
Plays.
'I like tennis very much' would be a more usual way of writing that sentence.
It is neither. The noun "let" is a term used in tennis and racket sports.The verb let is an auxiliary verb (e.g. let us see, let him go).
Your question is a little hard to understand. To translate "play [sport]" into French, you use the formula "jouer au..." For example: I play tennis. -- Je joue au tennis.
No, it is not. It may be a verb, the third-person singular present tense form of to serve, or it can be a plural noun, more than one "serve" as in tennis.
It is the verb. It is the past tense and past participle form of the verb to play.John plays tennis. Last year he played in the qualifying rounds of the U.S. Open tournament, but he didn't get very far!
Trampoline Tennis Table-tennis
English- Tennis French- Tennis Spanish- Tenis Finnish- Tennis Czech- Tenis Dutch- Tennis German- Tennis
Tennis
The typical sport that uses the term, "deuce", is Tennis or Table Tennis.