# 13. The Verb "Ir" > Source: [A Complete Guide To Every Fundamental In Spanish](https://youtube.com/watch?v=YHDZSHCt1DE&t=2823s) `Ir` means "to go." It's a monosyllabic, irregular verb whose present-tense forms have nothing to do with its infinitive. It also collapses English "I go" and "I am going" into a single Spanish form, and uses the preposition **a** to express destinations or near-future actions. ## Key Rules - `ir` is **irregular and monosyllabic** — its present-tense stem is `v-`, not `ir-`. - Spanish has no separate present progressive for `ir`; one form covers both "I go" and "I am going." - For destinations or near-future actions, use **`ir + a + (place / infinitive)`**: - destination: `Yo voy a la tienda` (I'm going to the store). - near-future: `Yo voy a hacer mi tarea` (I'm going to do my homework). - Without a destination, drop the `a`: `Yo voy allí` (I go there), `Yo voy con mis amigos` (I'm going with my friends). - `ir + a + infinitive` is Spanish's everyday "going to" future. ## Conjugation: ir (present indicative) | Pronoun | Form | |---------|------| | yo | voy | | tú | vas | | él / ella / usted | va | | nosotros | vamos | | vosotros | vais | | ellos / ellas / ustedes | van | ## Examples | Spanish | English | |---------|---------| | Yo voy. | I go / I am going. | | Yo voy allí. | I go there. | | Yo voy con mis amigos. | I'm going with my friends. | | Yo voy a la tienda. | I'm going to the store. | | Yo voy a la clase. | I'm going to the class. | | Yo voy a hacer mi tarea. | I'm going to do my homework. | | Yo voy a leer este libro. | I'm going to read this book. | | Tú vas a trabajar. | You're going to work. | | Él va a mi casa. | He goes to my house. | | Nosotros vamos allí con todos. | We go there with everybody. | | Ellos van a la universidad. | They're going to the university. | ## Notes & Gotchas - Spanish does **not** form present progressive for `ir` (no `estoy yendo` in everyday speech) — use the simple present. - The preposition **a** is required for destinations and for "going to + verb" (near future). Without `a`, the meaning is generic ("I go there / with friends") rather than specifying a target. - `a + el` always contracts to **`al`**: `Voy al cine`, never `voy a el cine`. - `ir + a + infinitive` is the most common way to express future intentions in conversation.