It means: how are you going to go
"Vas a salir conmigo" means "Are you going to go out with me?" in English.
"Vas a ir a la caja" translates to "You are going to go to the checkout counter" in English.
Are you going (Are you going to go)
¿Vas mañana? ¿Vas a ir mañana?
It means: Where are you going to go, dummy? dónde vas a ir= where are you going to go pendejo= dummy (or other similar derogatory names)
"Vas a salir conmigo" means "Are you going to go out with me?" in English.
"Vas a ir a la caja" translates to "You are going to go to the checkout counter" in English.
Are you going (Are you going to go)
"¿Vas a ir de viaje?" is Spanish for "Are you traveling?" or "Are you going on vacation?"
¿Vas mañana? ¿Vas a ir mañana?
It means: Where are you going to go, dummy? dónde vas a ir= where are you going to go pendejo= dummy (or other similar derogatory names)
Where are you going to go next week
¿Adónde vas a ir?
ir means 'to go'. Conjugations in present tense: voy- i go vamos- we go vas- you go vais- you all go va- he/she/it goes van- they go
Porqué no vas (a ir)?
Querés ir = Do you want to go? (in Argentinian Spanish)
Lets first go through what each of the words mean: bueno - well si - if te - reflexive for 'you' hablo - I talk (hablar is the infinitive of the verb) en - in espanol - spanish todo - all la - the veces - time como - how vas - you go (ir is the infinitive of the verb (irregular)) a - to intender - not a spanish word, perhaps they meant 'entender' - to understand so put that all together and you get: well, if I talk to you in spanish all the time, how will you understand?