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Is saving money consider as an intention or as an arrangment ? Since i turned the intention into an action and started saving . But i can't really say that it is an arrangment either

It was a question in my quiz: By arrangments i mean using present continous intention : going to

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  • I think the word "arrangement" has some special meaning for you which is different from the standard definition. Could you add more context? Why is it important whether it is an "intention" or an "arrangement"? Does this change the grammar in any significant way?
    – Andrew
    Nov 8, 2017 at 21:42

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"Saving money" is an in-action arrangement, not a planned one. The second part can either be an intention "is going to buy" or an arrangement "is buying". (read here)

An "arrangement" is something planned or arranged (for now or the future).

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