At my place, babe !
"Chez-moi" means: "my place"If you mean: "Chez-moi à .... " it mans: chez-moi in.... (Location, ex. Boston)At my pace in .... (location, ex. Boston)Hoped it helped.
Si tu viens chez moi means If you come to my placeViens-tu chez moi ? means Are you coming to my place?'Si, viens-tu chez moi?' would mean 'Yes (in contradiction to a question such as: 'You won't be in this evening, will you?'), are you coming to my place?'
Retrouvez-moi chez moi Viens chez moi à.....
AnswerIt means,"To go to my house."Note: "aller à chez moi" is very awkward because of the two prepositions. It would be much more natural to say "aller chez moi".
At a guess "Chez-moi ou chez-vous?"
home for example chez moi - my house
chez moi ce soir means - at my house/place this evening
Bienvenu chez moi
This question is asking whether we are going to your house or my house. The phrase "chez toi" means "at your place" and "chez moi" means "at my place" in French. The choice between the two depends on the context of the conversation and the agreement between the individuals involved.
Mon chez means my home (it should be - mon chez moi)
Je suis chez moi, I think...
"Chez" (pronounced shay) is a French word which means "at" or "near". "Chez moi" means "at my place"; "chez toi" is "at your place". "La" is the pronoun for singular feminine nouns, just as "le" is the pronoun for singular masculine nouns. It is the equivalent of the English word "the" so "la maison" is the house, "la voiture" is the car, and so on. If you put them together, "chez la maison" means "at the house", or "chez la boulangerie" means "at the bakery". But if you are talking about a masculine noun like "pont" you have to say "chez le pont" for "at the bridge".