"Are you coming?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase "Tu viens?"
Specifically, the subject pronoun "tu" means "(informal singular) you." The verb "viens" means "(informal singular you) are coming, come, do come." The pronunciation is "tyoo vyeh."
Comment viens-tu à l'école? in French is "How do you come to school?" in English.
are you coming?
tu viens d'où ? means 'where do you come from? ' in French.
"Are you coming to my party?" in English is Tu viens à ma petite fête? in French.
Where are you from?D'où venez-vous ?Tu viens d'où ?d'où es-tu ? / d'où viens-tu ? / de quel pays es-tu ?d'où viens-tu ?d'où est-ce que tu viens ?
d'où viens-tu, d'où est-ce que tu viens
where are you from mean d'où viens tu ? in french
It is properly spelt as ''d'où viens-tu?''. It means ''Where do you come from?''.
"d'où est-ce que tu viens ?" or "où est-ce que tu habites ?"
"You did have" and "You used to have" are English equivalents of the French phrase Tu avais. The pronunciation will be "tyoo a-veh" in French.
Dans quelle ville habites-tu ?
"How are you?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Comment vas-tu? The pronunciation of the phrase in the present indicative of the second person informal singular -- which literally translates as "How are you going?" or "How do you go?" -- will be "kuh-maw va-tyoo" in French.