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Going To Future

15 min

Learning Goals

  • Form the 'going to' future correctly
  • Use it for plans, intentions, and evidence-based predictions
  • Choose between 'will' and 'going to'

Going To Future

“Going to” is used for plans, intentions, and predictions based on present evidence.

Formation

Affirmative

am/is/are + going to + base verb

SubjectBe + Going To + Verb
Iam going to work
He / She / Itis going to work
You / We / Theyare going to work

Contractions: I’m going to, She’s going to, They’re going to

Examples:

  • I**‘m going to study** medicine.
  • She**‘s going to travel** to Japan.
  • They**‘re going to move** next month.

Negative

am/is/are + not + going to + base verb

  • I**‘m not going to** do that.
  • She isn’t going to come.
  • They aren’t going to help.

Questions

Am/Is/Are + subject + going to + base verb?

  • Are you going to come?
  • Is she going to study?
  • What are they going to do?

When to Use “Going To”

1. Plans and Intentions

Something you have already decided to do:

  • I**‘m going to buy** a new car. (I’ve decided)
  • She**‘s going to start** a new job next month.
  • We**‘re going to visit** Paris in summer.
  • What are you going to do after university?

Signals: I’ve decided, I’ve planned, I intend to

2. Evidence-Based Predictions

Something you can see or feel is about to happen:

  • Look at those clouds! It**‘s going to rain**.
  • Be careful! You**‘re going to fall**!
  • She looks pale. She**‘s going to faint**.
  • The car is speeding. There**‘s going to be** an accident!

3. Something About to Happen

Imminent events:

  • The bus is going to leave. Hurry!
  • The baby is going to cry.
  • I think I**‘m going to sneeze**.

Going To vs. Will

Plans vs. Spontaneous Decisions

Going to (already planned):

  • I**‘m going to visit** my parents this weekend. (planned before)
  • What are you going to have? – I**‘m going to have** pizza. (decided before)

Will (decided now):

  • I**‘ll have** pizza. (decides while looking at menu)
  • I**‘ll visit** my parents this weekend. (decides at moment of speaking)

Evidence vs. Opinion

Going to (evidence):

  • Look at those clouds! It**‘s going to rain**. (I can see)
  • She’s studied hard. She**‘s going to pass**. (I have evidence)

Will (opinion):

  • I think it will rain tomorrow. (my opinion)
  • I think she**‘ll pass**. (I believe so)

Going To vs. Present Continuous

Both can express future plans:

Going to - intention, not yet arranged:

  • I**‘m going to see** the doctor. (I intend to)

Present continuous - definite arrangement:

  • I**‘m seeing** the doctor at 3. (I have an appointment)

Compare:

  • I**‘m going to buy** a house. (intention, not arranged)
  • I**‘m buying** a house next week. (arranged, papers ready)

Common Patterns

In Questions

  • What are you going to do tonight?
  • Where are you going to stay?
  • When is she going to arrive?
  • How are they going to get there?

With Time Expressions

  • I’m going to start tomorrow.
  • She’s going to leave next week.
  • We’re going to travel in summer.
  • They’re going to retire in 5 years.

Informal Speech: “Gonna”

In informal spoken English, “going to” often sounds like “gonna”:

  • I’m gonna go now. (= I’m going to go)
  • What are you gonna do? (= What are you going to do?)

Note: This is spoken/informal. In writing, use “going to.”

Practice

Choose the correct option:

  1. “I’ve decided. I ___ (study) law.” → I**‘m going to study** law. (plan/decision already made)

  2. “Look! The baby ___ (cry)!” → The baby is going to cry! (evidence-based prediction)

  3. “Would you like pizza or pasta?” – “I ___ (have) pasta.” → I**‘ll have** pasta. (spontaneous decision)

  4. “What ___ you ___ (do) after graduation?” → What are you going to do after graduation?

Verb Tenses Essentials
2 of 12 lessons