"Dans sac il y a" in French means "In the bag there is." It is a phrase used to indicate the presence of something inside a bag or container.
dans le village il y a......
You would say "Aussi, dans ma ville, il y a" in French.
In its / in her / in his ... "dans son ...' is to be followed by a masculine noun: elle met ses affaires dans son cartable > she puts her thing in her schoolbag; le chien boit dans son bol > the dog drinks in its bowl; il prend son téléphone dans son manteau > he takes his telephone in hiscoat.
To say "what is in your pencil case" in French, you would say "Qu'y a-t-il dans ta trousse ?"
Question : Il y a combien de jours dans une semaine ? Réponse : Il y a sept jours dans une semaine. Ou : Une semaine comprend sept jours.
Qu'est-ce qu'il y a dans ton sac means "what is there in your bag?" in French.
"qu'est-ce qu'il y a dans ton sac ?" translates as "what is in your bag?". You answer: "dans mon sac, il y a ..." plus the things that are inside.
dans votre sac il y a.... (this is the version if speaking to an adult or someone you don't know, i.e. the polite version) dans ton sac il y a... (the version if your speaking to a friend or family member etc.)
To say a schoolbag in French it is un sac a dos.
in my bag there is a blue pencil case
A textbook can be translated to "un livre", which is French for a 'book'.
dans le village il y a......
"he is in a village in Scotland"
It means, "there is nothing". Il n'y a rien dans l'auto - would mean, "There is nothing in the car".
"Il y a un livre dans mon bureau."**Or, if you mean a student's desk at school, Il y a un livre dans mon pupitre.**
"What is in ...?" is "qu'y a-t-il dans ...?" in French. In an affirmative sentence, it is "Ce qu'il y a dans ...".
You would say "Aussi, dans ma ville, il y a" in French.