Recherche parmi différents professeurs en Anglais…
mayi
"headed for" and "heading to"
I am kind of confused about the usage of "is headed for" and "is heading to"
I am heading to a restaurant.
I was supposed to be headed for LA.
so, if I say: I am headed for a restaurant, or I was supposed to be heading to LA. is it right or wrong?
Thanks a lot.
12 oct. 2018 06:55
Réponses · 4
I think they are not together; heading to/for and headed to/for are possible
I'm heading = my action, I'm going there now. I'm headed = the direction (maybe not chosen by me)
As Phil said, 'for' is a general direction of a journey, 'to' is for a specific destination
12 octobre 2018
It wouldn’t be wrong to reverse them, but your sentences work best as written.
Explanation: “headed to” includes the expectation of arrival, while “headed for” puts more emphasis on the journey itself. In “I am heading to a restaurant,” we can be fairly certain of arriving at the restaurant, but in “I was supposed to be headed for LA,” it seems that the journey didn’t even get started.
12 octobre 2018
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mayi
Compétences linguistiques
Chinois (mandarin), Anglais
Langue étudiée
Anglais
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