Idę do domu.

Word
Idę do domu.
Meaning
I am going home.
Part of speech
sentence
Pronunciation
Lesson

Breakdown of Idę do domu.

ja
I
dom
the house
iść
to go
do
to
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Questions & Answers about Idę do domu.

Why is it Idę and not Chodzę?
In Polish, Idę indicates that you are going somewhere right now or in the immediate future, whereas Chodzę describes a habitual action (like "I walk" or "I go regularly"). If you mean you are literally on your way home at this moment, you use Idę do domu instead of Chodzę do domu.
Why can the pronoun ja be omitted in Idę do domu?
Polish is a pro-drop language, which means the subject pronoun (ja, ty, etc.) can be left out if the verb form makes the subject clear. Idę already shows that it is first-person singular ("I"), so adding ja is not necessary.
What case is domu in Idę do domu, and why?
Domu is in the genitive case. The preposition do always takes the genitive in Polish. So while the base form is dom (house, home), combined with do, it becomes do domu.
How do I pronounce the ę in Idę?
The ę is a nasal vowel. In Idę, it’s often pronounced as a lightly nasalized vowel, somewhat like the French "en," but softened at the end of a word in Polish. You may notice it sounding a bit like /em/ but with a lingering nasal quality.
Is Idę do domu in the present tense only?
Grammatically, Idę do domu is in the present tense. However, in everyday Polish, it can also imply an immediate future action—meaning you’re going home right now or very soon. But its form is still the present tense of iść.

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