going on

IPA/ˈɡəʊ.ɪŋ ˌɒn/
IPA/ˈɡoʊ.ɪŋ ˌɑːn/

going on — adverb

1. used when a number — such as someone's age, a point in time, or a sum of money —

1.副詞B1
釋義

used when a number — such as someone's age, a point in time, or a sum of money — is close to but not quite at a round figure. The speaker says 'going on [number]' to indicate the quantity is nearly that number but has not yet reached it.

例句

Grandma Lin is going on eighty but still walks to the market every morning.

going on + age

It was going on three in the morning when the last guest left the party.

going on + time of day

同義詞
  • nearly

    neutral and widely usable in formal and informal contexts; 'going on' adds a conversational, storytelling tone

  • almost

    more general than 'going on'; can modify any adjective or verb, whereas 'going on' is restricted to quantities

  • close to

    slightly more formal than 'going on', works in writing as well as speech

  • approaching

    more formal and precise; 'going on' is conversational and implies an informal setting

文法句型

[someone/something] + is + going on + [round number/age/amount]

[clock/watch/it] + is/was + going on + [hour]

用法筆記

Common in conversational English. The quantity after 'going on' is always a round number (ten, twenty, fifty) or a half-hour point. When talking about the time of day, the subject is often a clock, a watch, or the impersonal pronoun 'it' ('the clock was going on nine', 'it was going on seven'). Do not use 'going on' with precise figures — you would not say 'going on 37 years old' or 'going on 8:14'. Some dictionaries label the time-specific use with a clock subject as a phrasal verb, but in everyday usage it follows the same pattern as other quantity expressions.

常見錯誤

She is going on for 40 years old.
She is going on 40.
💡Do not add 'for' or 'years old'/'o'clock' after 'going on'; the expression already implies the unit.

2. used to describe a child or young person whose interests, way of speaking, or ge

2.副詞B2
釋義

used to describe a child or young person whose interests, way of speaking, or general behaviour seem more like those of someone much older — for instance, a seven-year-old who reads newspapers and discusses politics might be called 'seven going on seventeen'.

例句

Selim is eight going on eighteen — he asked the waiter for the wine list as a joke.

fixed expression: [age] going on [older age]

Tanvi's daughter is twelve going on twenty-five — she manages her own schedule and family budget.

同義詞

文法句型

[someone] + is + [number] + going on + [larger number]

用法筆記

The older age used after 'going on' is always a multiple of five (fifteen, eighteen, twenty-five, thirty) and is chosen to exaggerate the contrast with the child's real age. The expression is playful or affectionate, not critical.

常見錯誤

My son acts like a teenager, he is 10 going on 16.
My son is 10 going on 16
💡he acts like a teenager.' — Place the expression immediately after the age; do not separate it with a comma or clause.