Wiktionary
alt. 1 (non-gloss definition: Forms a future tense.) 2 (non-gloss definition: Forms a tense future to some past time.) phr. 1 (non-gloss definition: Forms a future tense.) 2 (non-gloss definition: Forms a tense future to some past time.)
Usage examples of "going to".
The opponent knew that the play was going to happen several times a game.
You are going to spend the majority of your time making, selling, promoting, and extolling the virtues of something that you will be intimately associated with in your mind and everyone else’.
There were many questions on my youthful mind regarding what we were going to do in regards to the rain delay, how we would get through the day, and how our game would be affected.
I told the existing leasing broker, a friend of mine, that I was going to renovate the building and get tenants.
They are never going to want to settle the case, because then their legal fees stop.
But until they got to wherever they were going to start the process of infiltrating the Empire, she really had only two choices: help them, or die.
One day, he came to me and told me he was going to invest in a fast-food franchise.
My driver, Tony, recalls a time when I was going to deliver a speech.
Mockett, what are you going to do for my customers and what are you going to do for my people?
That was Crystalman's face, and we are going to Crystalman's country.
It would have been one of the few such places in existence in Swift's time and one to which one can imagine someone of Swift's curious mind going to find in it a redoubt of meditation and solitariness near the river, as it was to Sebastian Dangerfield quaffing bottles of stout who made his way there, as was reflected in The Ginger Man.