tu viens d'où ? means 'where do you come from? ' in French.
'il faut que tu viennes" is the correct form. It means "you need to come"
de quelle ville viens-tu, de quelle ville es-tu?
The opposites for the verb "venir" (to come) are "s'en aller" (to leave, to depart) or "partir". Opposites of "je viens": je m'en vais, je pars. - of "tu viens": tu t'en vas, tu pars. - of "viens!" (imperative mood): "vas-t'en ! Pars !"
D'ou viens-tu ? for the informal singular D'ou venez-vous ? for the formal or plural
"Je t'attends, viens" means "I'm waiting for you, come" in French.
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?'
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 ?
where are you from mean d'où viens tu ? in french
"D'où viens-tu?" translates to "Where are you from?" in English. It is a question asking about someone's place of origin or where they come from.
Irez vous patiner? Iras tu patiner? If you mean will you go skating with me/us Viendrez vous patiner? Viens tu patiner (usually tu viens patiner,)
d'où viens-tu, d'où est-ce que tu viens
normally, it means "when you come boy."
The duration of Pourquoi viens-tu si tard? is 1.67 hours.
'il faut que tu viennes" is the correct form. It means "you need to come"
Comment viens-tu à l'école? in French is "How do you come to school?" in English.
"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."
Are you coming tonight?