No. The word "chez" means "at" someone's place, often one's house, but not necessarily.
Ex: Chez toi ou chez moi ? > your place or mine?
je vais chez l'épicier > I'm going at the grocers
Chez les anglais, on mange des choses bizarres > Where the British live (= the place the Brits call home), one eats strange things.
Yes, the word "Chez" does have an accent on the letter "e" in French: "Chez".
At the house of X is "Chez X" in French You can also say "Ã la maison de X".
The literal translation is "dans notre maison".
You would say "Je suis chez moi" in French to mean "I am at my house."
"Puis-je venir chez vous/toi?" or "Est-ce que je peux venir chez vous/toi?"You can't say 'can I come to your house?' in French. In France at least, you have to say 'chez toi/vous' not 'à ta/votre maison'.
"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".
Yes, the word "Chez" does have an accent on the letter "e" in French: "Chez".
At the house of X is "Chez X" in French You can also say "Ã la maison de X".
"at Chandler's" if you're speaking of a place. "in Chandler's writing / Chandler's books" when speaking of the writing of the author. Chez is the French word for House or home, so Chez Chandler is Chandler's House or Chandler's home.
at sb's house
chez vous
home for example chez moi - my house
Chez means at - house Tait means keeps silent
chez soi
Bienvenu chez moi
chez Mireille
chez mon ami