Yeah How are you going to get it back As soon as Scott and Gordon asked me that, I had no clue to how I am going to get Fire Flash back to London. I had no choice but to ask Scott to give me a hand with the help of TB1. All I had to do was give Scott this look and he would go "Fine, fine what is it you want me to do?" If you are asking one person "where are you going?" you can use either "¿A dónde vas?" or "¿Para dónde vas?". If it's a person with whom you have a more formal relationship, you'll want to use "¿A dónde va?" or "¿Para dónde va?". If you're addressing multiple people, you want to ask "¿A dónde van?" or How are you going - Idioms by The Free Dictionary How are you going? (redirected from how are you going) How are you going? A greeting inquiring about one's well-being and current activities. Primarily heard in Australia. Well, I haven't seen you in a while! How are you going? See also: how 1. Use of the going to-future 1.1. planned actions in the future. We are going to sing at the party. 1.2. You are certain that sth. is going to happen in the future (logical consequence). Look at that car! It is going to crash into the yellow one. 2. Signal words. no unambiguous ones. 3. Form. to be (am, are, is) + going to + infinitive On 25 January, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists moved the hands of the symbolic Doomsday Clock forward to two minutes to midnight. The Doomsday Clock was devised at the end of World War II and NCsuNH. A and B would be answers for to the question, "How are you doing?" not, "How are you going?" As for why "On my own" is better than "By train" – if a person was traveling alone by train, either answer could be appropriate. I'd like to think that the clues are the word "buddy" which may suggest friendship? However, if it does, it's a poorly written question, because many folks are more likely to greet a total stranger with a word like "buddy" than a close friend, and the follow-on remark, "A little busy, though." However, neither one of those would suggest "on my own" is more appropriate than "by train" – at least not to me. One last thought "On my own" can also mean "I'm single, and I don't have a girlfriend right now." However, it's a bit of a stretch to think someone would answer a question about traveling that way, so, even if that was the case, I still think it's a rather bad question.

how are you going