Sara
Be off to somewhere Hello everyone, I'm skeptical of getting the gist of this sentence. Would you mind letting me know? # Dad, I'm off to university now. Thanks in advance
May 29, 2017 8:39 AM
Answers · 6
1
historically, the phrasal verb in the UK was to "go off". And over time it got reduced to the use with the verb "to be" such as "im off" "im going off to university" and "Im off to University" are both correct. I dont think these are used in American English. Perhaps someone else can clarify.
May 29, 2017
1
Off to ... means to leave for somewhere I am off to the shops.
May 29, 2017
1
It means "Okay. I am leaving for the university now." / "Okay. I am heading to the university now."
May 29, 2017
Hi. "Off to" most of the time means "going to" and that fits in so well with your sentence.
May 29, 2017
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