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Habibaelgindy Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

difference?

A: I'm doing it.
B: I'm going to do it.
C: I'll do it.
  

Top answer

habibaelgindy A: I'm doing it. It says that the work that you are doing now is it. habibaelgindy B: I'm going to do it.

  • habibaelgindy A: I'm doing it.
  • It says that the work that you are doing now is it.
  • habibaelgindy B: I'm going to do it.
  • This says about your intention.
  • It shows that it's your purpose to do it after a while.
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8 Answers
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habibaelgindyA: I'm doing it.
It says that the work that you are doing now is it.
habibaelgindyB: I'm going to do it.
This says about your intention. It shows that it's your purpose to do it after a while.
habibaelgindyC: I'll do it.
This one speaks on your intention (which is doing
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Can I say " I'm doing it." for something in the future?
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Yes, but context or an adverbial will be needed to make this clear.
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habibaelgindyCan I say " I'm doing it." for something in the future?
While the event is in the future how you can do it now? I thin, no.
For a better answer, please provide some explanation on that sentence.
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khoshtipWhile the event is in the future how you can do it now?
What do you mean by this cryptic question?
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Take a dictionary and open your eyes and look those words up on that dictionary.
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khoshtip Take a dictionary and open your eyes and look those words up on that dictionary.
Emotion: surprise
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habibaelgindyCan I say " I'm doing it." for something in the future?
Yes, in the right context.

Waitresses in a restaurant:

— Gina, somebody spilled wine on the floor. Table 19. Can you take care of that?
(Gina immediately picks up a rag and heads toward table 19.) I'm doing it, Pam!

CJ

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