Learning English grammar involves understanding how to properly use future tenses with will and going to. These two forms help express different types of future actions and intentions.
When using will, we typically express spontaneous decisions, promises, predictions, or future facts. For example, "I will help you with your homework" shows a spontaneous offer to help. 10 oraciones con will commonly include both affirmative statements like "She will graduate next year" and negative forms like "They will not attend the party." The structure becomes particularly important when forming oraciones con will interrogativas, such as "Will you join us tomorrow?" Students often practice with 100 oraciones con will to master various contexts and situations where this future form is appropriate.
Oraciones con going to express planned actions or intentions that have been decided before the moment of speaking. For instance, "I am going to visit my grandparents this weekend" indicates a pre-planned visit. 10 oraciones con going to typically cover different subjects and contexts to show planned future events. When forming oraciones con going to negativas, we use "not" after "am/is/are," as in "We are not going to watch the movie tonight." Oraciones interrogativas en inglés with going to follow the pattern "Am/Is/Are + subject + going to + verb?" like "Are you going to study tonight?" Both will and going to are essential for expressing future actions, but they serve different purposes and contexts in English communication. Understanding when to use each form helps students communicate more effectively about future events, plans, and spontaneous decisions.