diligentcircle
Sempai
- 21 Jun 2017
- 703
- 97
- 43
For what it's worth, "I will be going to get a Sak Yant done in November." sounds perfectly normal to me. And just to make sure there's no confusion, at the risk of possibly beating a dead horse, hirashin, lots of examples like this are perfectly normal:
"I'll be going to get some groceries in a few hours."
"I'll be going to see a movie tomorrow."
"I'll be going to hunt deer this Saturday."
It's exactly the same sort of construction as sentences like these, just in a different tense:
"I need to go change my tires."
"I went to mail my taxes."
"I want to go climb the sand dunes."
You can see that in this case, "going" is just referring to the fact that you have to go (travel) somewhere. It doesn't have to be distant; it could be someplace close by, though it usually implies a different building at least. But it implies that the travel is necessary to do what you want to do.
So back to the original sentence:
I'll be going to stay home.
That doesn't make sense because it's contradictory. If you're "staying" home, you're not going anywhere.
Similarly, consider this example:
I'll be going to watch a DVD.
If you're at home, that probably doesn't make sense either, because you wouldn't need to leave your house to watch a DVD. On the other hand, it would make sense if you're outside, or at work, or otherwise not in a general location where you could watch a DVD.
"I'll be going to get some groceries in a few hours."
"I'll be going to see a movie tomorrow."
"I'll be going to hunt deer this Saturday."
It's exactly the same sort of construction as sentences like these, just in a different tense:
"I need to go change my tires."
"I went to mail my taxes."
"I want to go climb the sand dunes."
You can see that in this case, "going" is just referring to the fact that you have to go (travel) somewhere. It doesn't have to be distant; it could be someplace close by, though it usually implies a different building at least. But it implies that the travel is necessary to do what you want to do.
So back to the original sentence:
I'll be going to stay home.
That doesn't make sense because it's contradictory. If you're "staying" home, you're not going anywhere.
Similarly, consider this example:
I'll be going to watch a DVD.
If you're at home, that probably doesn't make sense either, because you wouldn't need to leave your house to watch a DVD. On the other hand, it would make sense if you're outside, or at work, or otherwise not in a general location where you could watch a DVD.