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Today, I fly to London?



 
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ESL Forums | English Vocabulary, Grammar and Idioms
Nouns - some confusion (iron vs rod) | Sentence: Below is a quote that one of the repair shops has/have given me
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Today, I fly to London? #1 (permalink) Thu Apr 03, 2008 16:20 pm   Today, I fly to London?
 

Is it possible to say with future intention:

1. Today, I fly to London.

or is it better to say

2. Today, I am going to fly to London.

Or..

3. Today, I am flying to London.

Is it possible to say all three? Is one more correct than the others?

Thanks in advance, Belles
Belles1654
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Today, I fly to London? #2 (permalink) Thu Apr 03, 2008 17:14 pm   Today, I fly to London?
 

Hi Belles,

2 and 3 would be my preferred choices. 'Today, I fly to London' sounds a bit dramatic and also a little official. We use the Present Simple when we are talking/writing about events that have been planned in advance as in: Today the Olympic Torch comes to China.

Alan
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Nouns - some confusion (iron vs rod) | Sentence: Below is a quote that one of the repair shops has/have given me
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