In the sentence, "You are going home.", the parts of speech are:you; second person, personal pronoun, subject of the sentence.are; auxiliary verbgoing; verbhome; common noun, direct object of the verb.
It can either mean that you are going out for something and will be back soon. "I'm going to nip out to the store for milk." It could also mean going out for a drink depending on the context.
You are going to get licked.
noun, its a person place or thing.
going
The phrase "going home to Blighty" is a colloquial term used by British expatriates to refer to returning to Britain or the UK. It is often used to express nostalgia or a sense of longing for one's home country.
A blighty is a self inflicted injury, and many of the soldiers from WW1 gave themselves blightys to get out of the war, and to go home
Diggers in Blighty was created in 1933.
The duration of Diggers in Blighty is 1.2 hours.
The Techno Rose of Blighty was created in 1993.
Blighty - TV channel - was created in 2004.
Blighty Valley Cemetery was created in 1916-07.
Diggers in Blighty - 1933 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:G
Take Me Back to Dear Old Blighty was created in 1916.
You are going home
It's an old term for Britain from the British Raj (Empire). Blighty (not Blightly) derives from Hindustani meaning foreign. Old Blighty was an expression popularised during the first world war including its use by the poets Wilfred Owen and Siegfried Sassoon and used in the old music hall. A blighty wound was one that meant evacuation to Britain but not life threatening. It is not used now apart from humorously or by some expatriates as a means of referring affectionately to the old country.
Blighty