No, the correct way to say it is "going back home" or "going back to the house."
This sentence is a complex sentence, as it contains an independent clause ("I'm going to take a nap") and a dependent clause ("When I get home from school").
The sentence is missing punctuation to separate its clauses. It should be something like, "When you get home from school, you are going to take a nap."
I am going to the store, but I forgot my wallet at home.
That sentence is a declarative sentence, which makes a statement or declaration.
Yes, "He" can be the complete subject of a sentence. For example, in the sentence "He is going home," "He" is the complete subject because it tells us who or what the sentence is about and is followed by the verb "is going."
Going Back Home was created in 1948.
None of the men were going home. The verb were refers back to the simple subject men. Men were not men was. man was men were
I am going back home = Me vuelvo a casa.
I am going to the library after school today. I have an English class after lunch.
This sentence is a complex sentence, as it contains an independent clause ("I'm going to take a nap") and a dependent clause ("When I get home from school").
The sentence is missing punctuation to separate its clauses. It should be something like, "When you get home from school, you are going to take a nap."
Is 'going to' or 'will' correct in the following sentence: 'As soon as I arrive home, I am going to switch on my computer' ? Thank you
I was menacing to the store/back home
An object (of Time).
There are two nouns in the sentence:sister-in-law, a word for a person, subject of the sentence;home, a word for a thing, direct object of the verb 'will be going'.
If a sentence is a compound sentence, you can break it up into two or more pieces which would be complete sentences in themselves. Example: I am going to visit my sister, and then I am going to go home. This could also be phrased as, I am going to visit my sister. Then I am going to go home. A simple sentence cannot lose any section without becoming a sentence fragment. For example: We are friends. If you remove any word from that sentence you no longer have a sentence.
I am going to the store, but I forgot my wallet at home.