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French Phrase

T'as ton sac prêt pour demain ?

/ta tɔ̃ sak pʁɛ puʁ də.mɛ̃/
Meaning"Do you have your bag ready for tomorrow?"
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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.

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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?

1

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.

2

Adjective Agreement

Prêt agrees with the masculine noun sac, so it stays in the masculine form (prêt, not prête).

3

Possessive Determiner ton

Ton is the masculine singular possessive adjective meaning 'your' (used before masculine nouns).

4

Future Time Expression

Pour demain introduces a future reference, equivalent to 'for tomorrow' in English.

5

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

A

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.

B

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?

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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.