Jaagjah wrote:As for this, would it be the same as; At 9 o'clock I'm going to work? I was told to put "no" at the end of a verb to imply "ing". So hashiru "to run" would become hashiruno "running".
Verb + no turns the verb into a noun (as does verb + koto), so yes, "hashiru no" is running, but it's running in the sense of "I really like running," just as you would say "I really like ice cream." You're using the verb as a noun in that case. If you want "I am running," that's where the ~te iru form comes in. So:
Fujisanchou e hashite iru*
"I'm running to the top of Mt. Fuji"
Fujisanchou e hashiru no de tsukareta
"I got tired by running to the top of Mt. Fuji."
I don't think you can use ~te iru for something that will happen in the future. I believe "Ku-ji ni wa shigotoba ni itte iru" is translated as "I go to work at 9;" it's part of your daily schedule, it's habit. Literally, you are in the state of going to work at 9. "I'm going to work at 9" is just "ni iku" "I will go..."
*Edit: The e particles I'm using here are likely wrong. I remember there's something about how verbs like "to walk" and "to run" do not function the same as they do in English, but I've had no success in looking that up so far.