"Ou est tu" translates to "Where are you?" in English. It is a French phrase used to inquire about someone's location.
Where are you going?
où es-tu? qu'est-ce que tu fais? - where are you? what are you doing?
Est-ce que tu aimes ... means "Do you like ..." in English.
Are you french
"Do you want or don't you?"
In French, you would say, "Avez-vous des frères ou des sœurs?"
Ou est-tu mademoiselle? (there should be an accent over the u in 'ou' but I'm on my phone and i can't type that in)
Where are you my heart/love?Ou est tu mon coeur?
Where are you going?
If you are familiar with the person it is : Ou est-tu? If you are not familiar (formal) Ou-etes vous?
The sentence 'Ou es tu?' means Where are you. In the word-by-word translation, the conjunction 'ou' means 'where'. The verb 'es' means '[you] are', as the second person singular form in the present indicative tense. And 'tu' means 'you'.(it should be - où es-tu? - where are you?)
où es-tu? qu'est-ce que tu fais? - where are you? what are you doing?
Est-tu la makes no sense. Es-tu la means are you there
"Are you (a) professor or (a) student?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Tu es prof ou élève? The question represents a colloquial, conversational, friendly, informal way of asking Es-tu prof ou élève? or Est-ce que tu es prof ou élève? The pronunciation will be "tyoo ey pro-foo ey-lev" in French.
"when will you come to see me?"
In English, "est-ce que tu as une grande famille ou une petite famille" translates to "Do you have a large family or a small family?" The phrase is asking about the size of someone's family, whether they have many relatives or just a few.
tu est en couple ou célibataire ?