student asking question

I think the phrase 'is going to' should be followed by a verb, but why 'all these efforts' comes right after 'to'?

teacher

Native speaker’s answer

Rebecca

Good question. "Going to" in this context does not refer to physically "going to" a place, but rather, it refers to the act of doing something. In this case, "going to" refers to China making different efforts for science. So in this context, "going to" does not require a verb to follow. In other contexts as well, "going to" does not necessarily require that there be a verb right after. This is because "going to" is already a verb phrase. Ex: She's going to all this trouble to make us feel comfortable. Ex: He is going to the store after work.

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