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Quangtrungvtv Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

Be going to

After the lession , I am going to coffee shop. In, the coffee shop I am going to have a coffee cup . My friend is going to have a glass of water . I am going to spend 5$ for a cup of coffee and a glass of water.

  1. What time will they be here?




They’ll be here by 8.00

  1. When are you leave here?


We’re leaving tomorrow.

  1. What is he going to study at university?


He is going to study History.

  1. How long will you be there?


I’ll be away for three days.





  

Top answer

What exactly do you want us to do? It is unclear from your post.

  • What exactly do you want us to do?
  • It is unclear from your post.
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15 Answers
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What exactly do you want us to do? It is unclear from your post.
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After the lesson, I am going to the coffee shop. In the coffee shop I am going to have a cup of coffee. My friend is going to have a glass of water. I am going to spend $5 on a cup of coffee and a glass of water.

Very important: spaces come AFTER th
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Neeraj JainWhat exactly do you want us to do? It is unclear from your post.
I come here to learn, so my signature say all I want .
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Nona The BritWhen are you leaving here?

Is the above sentence correct?
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Yes.

also

when are you going to leave here?
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I feel that it should be:

When are you leaving from here?
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You could say that but the 'from' isn't necessary, and while it isn't wrong it doesn't sound as natural to me, but it may well be a feature of your local version of English.

When are you leaving New York?

When are you leaving school?

When are you leaving here?

Actually, if we want to talk about 'here' it is most natural of all to exclude the 'here' as it is obv
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It was the use of 'leave' with 'are' that was incorrect, as it mixes the verb tenses.

You could say When will you leave...

When do you leave...
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I think " when are you leaving " , It mean in the future , what day you leave and the day for leaving was in diary .
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Not necessarily. It could be for a current event. I could be at a party and ask another guest 'When are you leaving?' - meaning when are you leaving the party.

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