How do you say, "are there eggs in this?" in French?

Y at-il des œufs dans cette?

Just a little elaboration:

If "this" stands for a masculin noun, such as a basket (un panier), or a bag (un sac), you could say
Y a-t-il des oeufs dans celui-ci?
If it stands for a feminine object, such as a pocket (une poche), or a plate (asiette), then we would use the feminie form
Y a-t-il des oeufs dans celle-ci?
If you don't know what it stands for, then you could take a chance and use the masculine form.

To say "Are there eggs in this?" in French, you would say "Y a-t-il des œufs dans ceci ?" Now, let me break it down for you:

1. Start with "Are there," which translates to "Y a-t-il" in French. This is a common expression used to ask about the existence of something.

2. Next, we have "eggs," which is "des œufs" in French. "Des" is the plural indefinite article used before nouns.

3. Finally, we have "in this," which is "dans ceci" in French. "Dans" means "in," and "ceci" means "this."

Putting it all together, we have "Y a-t-il des œufs dans ceci ?" which literally means "Are there eggs in this?"