We say " Where are you from? " but we don't say " Where are you going to? " Right? Why? Or to put with " to " or without " to " is acceptable?
So, are they the same meaning?
"Where have you been? " and " Where have you been to?
"Where have you gone? " and " Where have you gone to?
"Where are you going to" is fine. The others are fine too, with or without "to". The meaning is the same in each pair.
New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.
"Where are you going to" is fine.
The others are fine too, with or without "to". The meaning is the same in each pair.
In American schools, an English teacher would deduct points for the sentences ending with "to." They still cite the old maxim not to end a sentence with a preposition, especially in the case of "where", since the preposition is superfluous.