Heading

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Ju

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Heading to somewhere is deliberate. It denotes an intended destination.

Eg. The plane is heading to Dubai.

Heading for somewhere is not always deliberate, and denotes a direction rather than a destination.

Eg. Oh, no! The plane is heading for those mountains!

Questions:

1. I googled the above information. Do you agree?
2. Could I say, "I'm heading Dubai."?

Thanks.
 
1. I think the distinction you have stated is a reasonable way to help you remember the difference of use between head to and head for.

2. You've missed a preposition in your sentence. If you follow the rule, which one should you use?
 
1. I think the distinction you have stated is a reasonable way to help you remember the difference of use between head to and head for.

2. You've missed a preposition in your sentence. If you follow the rule, which one should you use?

I should use "to".
Am I right?
 
I should use "to".
Am I right?

Yes. As you showed in your own examples in post 1, you would say "I'm heading to Dubai".
 
I should use "to".
Am I right?
Yes. And you can also say "I'm heading for Dubai" and "I'm headed for Dubai."

(British English might be different.)
 
Yes. And you can also say "I'm heading for Dubai" and "I'm headed for Dubai."

(British English might be different.)

May I ask the reason why we use I'm headed", it's passive voice?
 
May I ask [STRIKE]the reason[/STRIKE] why we use "I'm headed"? [STRIKE]it's[/STRIKE] Is it the passive voice?

No. What makes you think it could be the passive voice?

(Remember the great rule - if you can add "by zombies" to the sentence, it's passive!)
 
No. What makes you think it could be the passive voice?

(Remember the great rule - if you can add "by zombies" to the sentence, it's passive!)

As far as I know, verb-to-be followed by pass participle is considered as passive voice. Is it correct, please?
 
As far as I know, the verb "to be" followed by a [STRIKE]pass[/STRIKE] past participle is considered [STRIKE]as[/STRIKE] to be the passive voice. Is [STRIKE]it[/STRIKE] that correct? [STRIKE]please?[/STRIKE]

That's the case sometimes, yes. However, in this case, "headed" is an adjective. See HERE.
 
May I ask the reason why we use I'm headed", it's passive voice?
Because Dubai is where I'm headed.

(Actually, I can't imagine that I'll ever be headed there.)
 
I am neither a teacher nor a native English speaker.

I've heard quite often people saying head over to.
 
May I ask the reason why we use I'm headed", it's passive voice?

Yes, I think you can think of this as in the passive voice.

Don't worry about why. I don't think any explanation will be very helpful. Suffice to say that in some sense, the speaker sees himself as operating passively.
 
Yes "head over to" is quite common in American English. Example: let's head over to Joe's place and check out that new car he got.
 
May I ask (delete the reason) why we use "I'm headed", its passive voice?
Yes, you may.

I think of "I'm headed for Dubai" as active voice. How would you make it more active? "I'm Dubai-bound"?

There's nothing wrong with the so-called passive voice. So if you wanted to use a more passive voice, you could say something like:

- Dubai is where I'm headed.
- Where I'm headed for is Dubai.
- The place to which the person who's headed is me is Dubai.
 
That's the case sometimes, yes. However, in this case, "headed" is an adjective. See HERE.

May I know the differences between "is it correct" and "is that correct"?
 
I'm heading to Dubai.
Hm. They seem the same to me. (And see post #7.)

Ju, this is just another example of English's infinite gray areas. Neither suffix sounds more active than the other to me, but one does to Jutfrank.
 
May I know the differences between "is it correct" and "is that correct"?
If you're referring to something outside the question, use that:

- Is that the kid who stole your bike?
- Ari said the test is tomorrow. Is that correct?

If you're refering to something inside the question, us it:

- Is it time to get pizza?
- Is it correct to ask lots of questions?
 
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