A1 Expression Neutro

[장소]에 가요.

1718

I'm going to [place].

Phrase in 30 Seconds

Use [장소]에 가요 to state your destination clearly in any standard conversation.

  • Means: I am going to [place].
  • Used in: Telling friends where you are headed or answering 'Where are you going?'
  • Don't confuse: Don't use '에' for time-based destinations; it is strictly for physical locations.
Location + Destination Marker (에) + Movement Verb (가요) = Clear Direction

Explanation at your level:

This is a basic sentence. You put a place name first, then '에', then '가요'. It means you are moving to that place.
At this level, you learn that '에' is a particle for destinations. You can combine this with time words like '오늘' (today) or '내일' (tomorrow) to make more complex sentences about your daily schedule.
You can now distinguish between '에' (destination) and '에서' (location of action). You understand that '가요' is the polite 'Haeyoche' style, and you can shift to '갑니다' for professional contexts or '가' for casual settings.
You recognize the nuance of directional markers. You can incorporate this into complex sentences involving multiple clauses, such as 'I finished work, so I am going to the gym.' You also understand the social implications of stating your movements in a hierarchical society.
You analyze the phrase as a core component of Korean spatial deixis. You can contrast it with other movement verbs like '오다' (to come) or '다니다' (to attend/commute), understanding how the choice of verb reflects the speaker's perspective relative to the destination.
You master the subtle interplay between the locative particle '에' and the motion verb '가다'. You can deconstruct the historical shift from static to dynamic usage and apply it to nuanced social situations where stating a destination might be an indirect way of signaling departure or social boundary setting.

Significado

Stating one's destination or where one is currently going.

🌍

Contexto cultural

Asking 'Where are you going?' is a common greeting, not an interrogation.

💡

Particle Power

Always remember the particle '에'!

Significado

Stating one's destination or where one is currently going.

💡

Particle Power

Always remember the particle '에'!

Teste-se

Fill in the blank.

저는 ___에 가요. (School)

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: 학교

School is 학교.

🎉 Pontuação: /1

Perguntas frequentes

1 perguntas

No, use '한테' for people.

Frases relacionadas

🔗

어디에 가요?

similar

Where are you going?

Onde usar

👋

Asking a friend

A: 어디에 가?

B: 집에 가.

informal
🚕

Taxi ride

Passenger: 서울역에 가요.

Driver: 네, 알겠습니다.

neutral
💼

Work update

Colleague: 지금 어디에 가십니까?

You: 회의실에 갑니다.

formal

Memorize It

Mnemonic

Think of '에' as an arrow pointing to a place, and '가요' as the sound of your feet walking.

Visual Association

Imagine a map with a glowing arrow pointing to a building, and a person walking towards it.

Rhyme

Place + 에 + 가요, where I go today!

Story

Min-su wakes up. He says, '학교에 가요' (I go to school). He meets a friend. He says, '도서관에 가요' (I go to the library). Finally, he says, '집에 가요' (I go home).

Word Web

가다어디학교회사식당

Desafio

For one day, say out loud every place you are going to in Korean.

In Other Languages

Japanese high

場所へ行きます (Basho e ikimasu)

Korean uses '에' while Japanese uses 'に' or 'へ'.

Spanish moderate

Voy a [lugar]

Spanish conjugates the verb 'ir' based on the subject.

French moderate

Je vais à [lieu]

French requires subject pronouns.

German moderate

Ich gehe in die [Ort]

German uses cases (accusative) for movement.

Arabic moderate

أذهب إلى [المكان]

Arabic verb conjugation is complex.

Chinese low

我去 [地方]

Chinese does not use a particle like '에'.

Portuguese moderate

Vou ao [lugar]

Portuguese combines prepositions with articles.

Korean high

[장소]에 가요

None.

Easily Confused

[장소]에 가요. vs 에 vs 에서

Learners mix up destination and location of action.

Use '에' for destination, '에서' for where an action happens.

Perguntas frequentes (1)

No, use '한테' for people.

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