French Phrase
Tu as des questions pour moi ?
Meaning
Literally, “Do you have any questions for me?” It is a polite way to invite the listener to ask anything they are unsure about after you have explained something or given instructions.
When to use
Use this sentence at the end of a presentation, a lesson, a meeting, or any situation where you have just provided information and want to check that the other person understood.
✦Grammar Breakdown
Tuasdesquestionspourmoi?
Subject pronoun (Tu)
‘Tu’ is the informal second‑person singular pronoun used with friends, family, or peers.
Verb ‘avoir’ (as)
‘as’ is the present‑tense form of ‘avoir’ for ‘tu’; it means ‘you have’.
Indefinite article (des)
‘des’ is the plural indefinite article, equivalent to ‘some’ or ‘any’ in English.
Noun (questions)
‘questions’ is a feminine plural noun meaning ‘questions’.
Preposition (pour)
‘pour’ introduces the beneficiary or target of the questions – ‘for me’.
Disjunctive pronoun (moi)
‘moi’ is the stressed form of ‘je’, used after prepositions like ‘pour’.
🗨In Conversation
Tu as des questions pour moi ?
Do you have any questions for me?
Oui, comment fonctionne le système de points ?
Yes, how does the points system work?
✕Common Mistakes
Tu est des questions pour moi ?
‘Est’ is the third‑person singular of ‘être’; the correct verb for ‘you have’ is ‘as’ (avoir).
Tu as des question pour moi ?
The noun must agree in number with the article ‘des’; use the plural ‘questions’.
Tu as des questions à moi ?
‘À moi’ is not used after ‘questions’; the correct preposition is ‘pour’.
Tu avez des questions pour moi ?
When using ‘tu’, the verb must be conjugated as ‘as’, not ‘avez’ (which belongs to ‘vous’).
↔Alternatives
Est‑ce que tu as des questions pour moi ?
Do you have any questions for me?
As‑tu des questions pour moi ?
Do you have any questions for me?
Tu as des questions ?
Do you have any questions?
Y a‑t‑il des questions ?
Are there any questions?
Cultural Tip
‘Tu’ signals familiarity; if you’re speaking to a stranger, a superior, or in a formal setting, switch to the formal ‘vous’: “Vous avez des questions pour moi ?”. Also, French speakers often drop ‘pour moi’ when the context is clear, but keeping it adds a polite emphasis on the speaker’s willingness to answer.

