Learn English 100% free...Get 1 free lesson per week // Add a new lesson
Log in!

Click here to log in
New account
Millions of accounts created on our sites.
JOIN our free club and learn English now!



  • Home
  • Print
  • Guestbook
  • Report a bug




  • Get a free English lesson every week!
    Click here!





    Partners:
    - Our other sites
       


    Go home/Go to school

    Forum > English only || Bottom

    [POST A NEW REPLY] [Subscribe to this topic]


    Go home/Go to school
    Message from outcast posted on 08-02-2015 at 06:34:10 (D | E | F)
    Hello,

    Please tell me why there is a difference is sentence-structure for the sentences mentioned below?
    "I go home" and "I go to school"
    I think both ‘home' and ‘school' are similar in the sense that both the words refer to adverb of place.
    Please clarify my doubt.
    Thank you in advance.

    -------------------
    Edited by lucile83 on 08-02-2015 09:20


    Re: Go home/Go to school from carlabice47, posted on 08-02-2015 at 12:20:41 (D | E)
    Hello,
    the answer is as simple as that.
    Home does not want the preposition TO with verbs of movement. Come home ( Not come to home!), go home . Run home. etc.
    School wants the preposition TO with verbs of movement.
    Go to school, come to school . run to school

    Bye bye cb47



    Re: Go home/Go to school from outcast, posted on 08-02-2015 at 12:54:17 (D | E)
    Thanks cb47 for the answer,
    but according to your comment please let me understand why “Home does not want the preposition TO with verbs of movement” and why “School wants the preposition TO with verbs of movement”?
    Is it an exception or it differs from noun to noun?
    Thanks.



    Re: Go home/Go to school from lucile83, posted on 08-02-2015 at 14:53:07 (D | E)
    Hello,
    Home can act as an adverb of location, and as such doesn't require a preposition to indicate movement.
    Link

    Thus... people go home and come home.
    Hope this helps.



    Re: Go home/Go to school from outcast, posted on 08-02-2015 at 15:34:49 (D | E)
    Hello! Sorry to ask again.
    My question is, if “Home can act as an adverb of location”, then what’s wrong with the word ‘School’?
    Can’t the word ‘School’ act as an adverb of location?
    Or the word ‘Home’ has some special exception?
    Thanks.



    Re: Go home/Go to school from lucile83, posted on 08-02-2015 at 16:35:50 (D | E)
    Hello,
    I spoke of 'home', not 'school'.
    Home can act as an adverb, school can't. Call it an exception if you want, but you just have to know that.



    Re: Go home/Go to school from bamboozler, posted on 09-02-2015 at 12:05:12 (D | E)
    Hello,
    Every language is unique, so is English.
    There are some subjects which can't be argued. Sometimes it's perplexing but through experience we can get used to using it.

    -------------------
    Edited by lucile83 on 09-02-2015 12:26



    Re: Go home/Go to school from gerondif, posted on 11-02-2015 at 12:20:45 (D | E)
    Hello,
    you could also "learn it" that way:

    Use at when you are there and to when you go there:

    3 categories:
    1) usual nouns, use the:
    I am at the cinema, I go to the cinema
    I am at the supermarket, I go to the supermarket.

    2) common expressions where "the" disappears:
    I am at school, at work, at home, at rest, in town, in bed.
    I go to school, to work, to prison, to town, to bed.

    3) exception:
    I am at home, I go * home.

    as Lucile said, home can be considered as an adverb of location and we can find in textbooks when a pupil comes back from school:
    "Mum, I'm home (I'm back home) ! Where are you ?"

    but you could say: I am going to john's home, I am going to John's house.






    [POST A NEW REPLY] [Subscribe to this topic]


    Forum > English only