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Be Going To - Following the "Trail" of What's Already Set

Last updated: 5 de mayo de 2026

You see your roommate walk in with one single onion, a packet of instant noodles, and that thousand-yard stare. You don't need to be a psychic to know the future.

Textbooks often teach you that will and be going to are basically the same. A coin flip for talking about what's next.

This is a lie.

Be going to isn't about predicting the future. It’s about reporting on the present. You use it when you can see the trail of evidence leading directly to a future event. The seeds have already been planted.

You see the ingredients on the counter. The future is already in motion.

He's going to make instant noodles for dinner again.

Note:This isn't a guess. It's a conclusion based on clear, visible evidence. You can almost taste the salty broth already.

Look at those dark clouds. It's definitely going to rain.

Note:The future isn't a random event. The cause—the clouds—is right in front of you. You are simply stating the obvious next step. This is where most lessons stop. But the most powerful use of `be going to` isn't about the weather or what's for dinner. It's about human intention. An "intention" is just evidence you can't see. It's a decision that has already been made inside someone's mind. The path has been chosen. The arrow has been fired. We are just waiting for it to land. When someone uses `be going to` for their own plans, they are telling you: "The internal discussion is over. This is happening."

I'm going to block his number. I've had enough.

Note:This isn't a spontaneous idea. The decision was made after a long history of frustration. The blocking is just the final, physical step of a process that is already complete emotionally.

We're going to take a real vacation this year, no emails.

Note:This signals a firm, pre-meditated boundary. The planning, the saving, the mental commitment—it's all done. The trip is now an unstoppable force. [OPTIONAL-COMMENT]

The Arrow Has Already Left the Bow

Think of will as a spontaneous choice made in the moment, like pointing at a menu and saying I'll have the pizza[TRANS]. But be going to means the decision was made long before you even sat down at the restaurant. You've been thinking about that pizza all day. The decision process is in the past; only the outcome is in the future.

This is why be going to feels so much heavier, so much more certain. It connects a past cause to a future effect. It tells the listener that the story has already been written; we are just watching the final scene play out. It’s the difference between "I think this movie might be sad" and seeing your friend reach for the tissues and knowing "Oh, she's going to cry."

The Golden Rule is this: Don't use be going to to guess about the future. Use it when you can already see the future's shadow in the present. Whether it's dark clouds in the sky or a firm decision in someone's heart, the cause is already here.

Equipo de Expertos de Dicread

Este artículo fue elaborado por nuestro equipo dedicado de lingüistas y profesionales de la enseñanza del inglés. Nuestro objetivo es desglosar la gramática compleja en explicaciones auténticas y fáciles de entender.