✨ Basic Meaning
🎯 Primary Function
📋 Grammar Structure
🎭 Usage Contexts
Used naturally in formal reports or discussions to describe future trajectories or plans (e.g., 計画を進めていく).
Extremely common in daily conversation to talk about leaving, coming back later, or future aspirations.
Appears frequently in narrative to show physical movement and in essays/reports to discuss future policy or change.
Highly frequent, essential for discussing travel, movement, and future direction.
💡 Common Applications
📌 Important Points
⚠️ Common Mistakes
🏛️ Cultural Context
🔍 Subtle Differences
📝 Conjugation Notes
The main verb must be in the て-form. The verb 行く (iku) conjugates normally to show tense (e.g., 行った for past, 行きたい for desire, 行かない for negative future).
🔊 Pronunciation Tips
Ensure smooth connection between the V-te form and いく. For example, ‘hashitte’ (はしって) and ‘iku’ (いく) should flow together naturally. The ‘t’ sound in the て-form is typically clearly pronounced.
🧠 Memory Tips
Relate the sound ‘iku’ to the English ‘go.’ When you use V-te iku, you are doing the verb and ‘going’ (either physically or temporally into the future).
I’m a software engineer based in Japan, with experience in developing web and mobile applications. I’m passionate about technology, especially in DevOps, AI, and app development using platforms like AWS, Flutter, and Node.js. My goal is to build a website that shares knowledge about the Japanese language and IT, helping everyone learn and grow more easily in the digital era.