🔮 WILL vs 🚦 BE GOING TO
Future meaning: predictions and decisions. “will” = belief/instant choice; “be going to” = present evidence/intentions & plans.
Predictions: think vs see
Decisions: instant vs planned
Short answers
Contractions: I'll / won't
🧱Forms
WILL (modal)
FORM
- Affirmative: I will practise. / I’ll practise.
- Negative: I will not practise. / I won’t practise.
- Question: Will you practise?
- Short answers: Yes, I will. / No, I won’t.
BE GOING TO
FORM
- Affirmative: He is going to practise. / He’s going to practise.
- Negative: He is not going to practise. / He isn’t going to practise.
- Question: Is he going to practise?
- Short answers: Yes, he is. / No, he isn’t.
📌Meaning & Use
PREDICTIONS
WILL — what we think will happen (opinion/belief).
BE GOING TO — what we see is going to happen (present evidence).
BE GOING TO — what we see is going to happen (present evidence).
- Will: I think this lesson will be easy. 🙂
- Will: She will learn these words quickly.
- Going to: Hurry up! We’re going to miss the start of the class! ⏰
- Going to: Look at the sky — it’s going to rain. 🌧️
ℹ️
Sometimes both are possible. The lesson starts in 5 minutes. — We’re going to be late (I can see the evidence) / We’ll be late (I believe).
DECISIONS
WILL — instant decisions at the moment of speaking.
BE GOING TO — prior decisions, intentions or plans.
BE GOING TO — prior decisions, intentions or plans.
- “I don’t understand this word.” — “No problem, I’ll explain it.” 📘
- “Why are you opening your laptop?” — “Because I’m going to study.” 💻
- “We have a vocabulary quiz tomorrow.” — “Oh, I didn’t know. I’ll revise tonight.” (decision now)
- “We have a vocabulary quiz tomorrow.” — “Yes, I know. I’m going to revise after dinner.” (decided earlier)
🌟Useful functions
Typical with WILL
- Offers: I’ll help you with your homework. 🤝
- Promises: I won’t forget our lesson.
- Requests: Will you repeat that sentence, please?
- Refusals: He won’t practise speaking.
Typical with BE GOING TO
- Strong intentions: I’m going to start a new English course next month.
- Near-future results of current facts: You’re going to be late if you don’t leave now. 🚌
⚖️Side-by-side contrasts
Belief vs Evidence (Predictions)
- We need to hurry. We’ll be late. (belief)
- The lesson starts in 5 minutes. We’re going to be late. (evidence)
Now vs Already Decided (Decisions)
- The teacher is calling me — I’ll answer. (now)
- I planned it — I’m going to ask a question at the end. (plan)
✅Quick checks
See clear evidence now? → be going to
Just your opinion? → will
Decision made now? → will
Pre-decided plan? → be going to
🚫Common mistakes
- ❌ I go to study now. → ✅ I’ll study now. (instant decision)
- ❌ It will rain, look at the clouds! → ✅ It’s going to rain. (evidence)
- ❌ am going to not → ✅ am not going to
- Note: gonna is informal speech; avoid in formal writing.
🧭Related future expressions
- Present continuous for fixed arrangements: I’m meeting my tutor at 6.
- Present simple for timetables: The class starts at 7:45.
- Will in conditionals: If I have time, I ’ll practise more.
Recap: will = belief, offers, instant choices · be going to = evidence, intentions/plans. Choose the one that best matches your reason for talking about the future. 🌟
Exercises:
Will vs Be going to
1
A:The doorbell’s ringing.
B:I
it.
2
A:Why are there boxes everywhere?
B:We
next week.
3
A:Look at those black clouds!
B:It
soon.
4
A:Do you think we’ll beat City?
B:Yes, our team
tonight.
5
A:Why did you buy flour and eggs?
B:I
a cake tonight.
6
A:This bag is heavy.
B:Give it to me — I
you.
7
A:The milk is boiling over!
B:Quick — it
everywhere.
8
A:I’m worried about the exam.
B:Don’t be — if you study hard, you
.
9
A:You registered for the course, right?
B:Yes. When
the classes?
10
A:I left my notes at home.
B:No problem — I
you a copy later.
Will vs Be going to
1
I forgot my umbrella. — Don’t worry, I ____ you mine.
A.
B.
C.
2
Look at those dark clouds — it ____ any minute.
A.
B.
C.
3
Why are you carrying those boxes? — I ____ move them to the garage.
A.
B.
C.
4
Our company ____ launch a new app next month; the campaign is ready.
A.
B.
C.
5
Do you think the train ____ be on time? — No, I think it ____ be late.
A.
B.
C.
6
I forgot to email Helen. — OK, I ____ do it now.
A.
B.
C.
7
Scientists have recorded strong tremors; the volcano ____ erupt soon.
A.
B.
C.
8
A: What ____ you do this evening? — B: I ____ meet my cousin; we arranged it yesterday.
A.
B.
C.
9
The printer is jammed again. — OK, I ____ a look after this meeting.
A.
B.
C.
10
A: Why did you buy these paints? — B: I ____ redecorate the bedroom. — A: Nice! It ____ look amazing.
A.
B.
C.
Will vs Be going to
Tip: be going to — prior plan / evidence now; will — instant decision, offer/promise, or opinion.
Subject is optional in the box (e.g., “It’s going to rain” or just “going to rain”).
1
I’m carrying a toolbox; I (repair) the door.
2
Look at those clouds — it (rain).
3
The windows are open — I (close) them now.
4
She’s in great form; she (win) the match, I think.
5
We bought tickets; we (see) the new movie tonight.
6
I don’t think I (be) home before ten.
7
The phone’s ringing — I (answer) it.
8
What (you/do) with these boxes?
9
If you don’t wear a coat, you (catch) a cold.
10
Don’t worry — our team (lose) this time.