French Phrase
T'as réussi le test ?
Meaning
A casual way to ask someone if they passed a particular test. The tone is friendly and informal, implying the speaker is interested in the outcome but not demanding a formal answer.
When to use
Use this phrase with friends, classmates, or colleagues you know well. It’s perfect after a quiz, exam, driving test, or any short assessment where the result is already expected to be known.
✦Grammar Breakdown
T'asréussiletest?
Contraction T'
T' is the spoken contraction of the subject pronoun tu and the auxiliary verb as (tu as). It is common in informal spoken French.
Passé composé with avoir
Réussir forms its passé composé with the auxiliary avoir: tu as réussi. The past participle does not agree with the subject.
Definite article le
Le test refers to a specific test already known to both speakers; use un test for an unspecified one.
Question intonation
When the sentence ends with a rising intonation, the whole phrase becomes a yes‑no question without needing inversion.
🗨In Conversation
T'as réussi le test ?
Did you pass the test?
Oui, j'ai eu 18 sur 20 ! Et toi, comment ça s'est passé ?
Yes, I got 18 out of 20! And you, how did it go?
✕Common Mistakes
T'es réussi le test ?
t'es is the contraction of tu es (to be), not tu as (to have). Use t'as for the auxiliary avoir.
T'as été réussi le test ?
Réussir always uses avoir as its auxiliary; using être is incorrect.
T'as réussi le test de maths hier ? (when no prior reference)
If the test hasn't been mentioned before, use un test. Using le implies a specific, known test.
↔Alternatives
As‑tu réussi le test ?
Did you pass the test?
Tu as réussi le test ?
Did you pass the test?
Est‑ce que tu as réussi le test ?
Did you pass the test?
Tu as passé le test ?
Did you pass the test?
Cultural Tip
In everyday French, especially among young people, contractions like t'as, j'suis, y'a are the norm. Reserve the full form (tu as) for formal writing or when speaking to someone you don’t know well. Also, French speakers often add a small smile or a light tone to signal that the question is friendly rather than interrogative pressure.

