BE GOING TO | FORMACIÓN
Cuando empleamos "going to"
en una oración para referirnos al futuro, la construcción se compone de tres
elementos:
el verbo "to be" conjugado conforme al sujeto + "going" + el infinitivo del verbo principal
el verbo "to be" conjugado conforme al sujeto + "going" + el infinitivo del verbo principal
Sujeto
|
+ to be (conjugado)
|
+ going
|
+ infinitivo
|
She
|
is
|
going
|
to leave.
|
I
|
am
|
going
|
to stay.
|
Afirmativa
|
|||
He
|
is
|
going
|
to jog.
|
Negativa
|
|||
He
|
is not
|
going
|
to jog.
|
Interrogativa
|
|||
Is
|
he
|
going
|
to jog?
|
Interrogativa negativa
|
|||
Isn't
|
he
|
going
|
to jog?
|
FUNCIÓN
El uso de "going to" para
referirse a eventos futuros sugiere un vínculo muy sólido con el presente. El
momento preciso no es relevante, es posterior al ahora, pero la actitud implica
que dicho evento depende de algo que sabemos sobre la situación actual. "Going
to" se emplea sobre todo para hablar de nuestros planes e
intenciones, o para realizar predicciones basadas en evidencias actuales. En el
discurso cotidiano, "going to" suele acortarse
como "gonna", especialmente en inglés americano, aunque
nunca se escribe así.
USO DE "GOING
TO" PARA REFERIRSE A PLANES E INTENCIONES
EJEMPLOS
- Is Freddy going to buy a new car soon?
- Are John and Pam going to visit Milan when they are in Italy?
- I
think Nigel and Mary are going to have a party next week.
- We are going to have dinner together tomorrow.
- Aren't you going to stay at the library until your report
is finished?
USO DE "GOING
TO" PARA FORMULAR PREDICCIONES
EJEMPLOS
- He's going to be a brilliant politician.
- I'm going to have a hard time falling asleep.
- You're going to be sorry you said that.
- Is it going to rain this afternoon?
- Aren't they going to come to the party?
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