French Phrase
T'as ton sac prêt pour demain ?
Meaning
Literally, 'You have your bag ready for tomorrow?' It checks whether the listener has already packed their bag for the next day. The phrase is informal and assumes a friendly relationship.
When to use
Use this sentence with friends, family, or classmates when you want to confirm that someone is prepared for an upcoming event, such as a school day, a trip, or a meeting. Avoid it in formal settings like a business meeting or with strangers.
✦Grammar Breakdown
T'astonsacprêtpourdemain?
Contraction T'as
T'as is the spoken contraction of tu as (you have). It is common in informal French but avoided in formal writing.
Adjective Agreement
Prêt agrees with the masculine noun sac, so it stays in the masculine form (prêt, not prête).
Possessive Determiner ton
Ton is the masculine singular possessive adjective meaning 'your' (used before masculine nouns).
Future Time Expression
Pour demain introduces a future reference, equivalent to 'for tomorrow' in English.
Question Intonation
In spoken French, a rising intonation at the end signals a yes‑no question, so the question mark is optional in speech.
🗨In Conversation
T'as ton sac prêt pour demain ?
Do you have your bag ready for tomorrow?
Oui, je l'ai tout préparé hier soir.
Yes, I packed everything last night.
✕Common Mistakes
T'es ton sac prêt pour demain ?
T'es means 'you are', not 'you have'. The correct verb is avoir (as) for possession.
T'as ton sac prête pour demain ?
Prête is the feminine form; sac is masculine, so the adjective must stay masculine (prêt).
Ton sac est prêt pour demain ?
While grammatically correct, this version sounds more formal. In casual speech, use the contraction T'as.
↔Alternatives
As‑tu ton sac prêt pour demain ?
Do you have your bag ready for tomorrow?
Ton sac est‑il prêt pour demain ?
Is your bag ready for tomorrow?
Tu as déjà préparé ton sac pour demain ?
Have you already prepared your bag for tomorrow?
Cultural Tip
In everyday French, especially among young people, contractions like t'as, j'suis, y'a are the norm. They give the conversation a relaxed, natural flow. However, when speaking to teachers, elders, or in a professional email, switch to the full forms (tu as, vous avez) and avoid slang contractions.

