About 50 results
Open links in new tab
  1. watch a film or see a film? - WordReference Forums

    Jul 12, 2009 · Watch and see are almost equivalent, and I wouldn't make a hard-and-fast rule about this question. In this case I think watch focuses more on the ongoing process and see on the …

  2. watch a movie = mirar / ver - WordReference Forums

    Oct 18, 2014 · Hola, I was wondering if there is a difference in "Mirar vs Ver" can they be used interchangeably? Does it depend on the country? If I want to say "I watch the movie on the …

  3. in / at the cinema | WordReference Forums

    Feb 15, 2009 · Both answers are possible. At the cinema implies that he has gone to the cinema to watch a movie or to work there. In the cinema implies merely that he is physically inside the cinema.

  4. catch a movie - WordReference Forums

    Mar 6, 2007 · "Catch a movie" to me implies going to a cinema to watch it. "Catch a movie" is pretty much an idiomatic phrase, so you can't say "catch a TV" unless you mean someone is throwing you …

  5. Going to watch/I'm watching - WordReference Forums

    Aug 7, 2020 · I'm going to watch a movie later today. I'm watching a movie later today. What's the difference between these two? If I'm not mistaken, both mean that the decision to watch a movie was …

  6. A cinema/the cinema | WordReference Forums

    May 17, 2022 · In British English, the word 'cinema' is alive, well and widely used. It can refer to 1) the art form (often uncountable and without an article) , e.g. the history of cinema 2) a physical building …

  7. I'm going to the cinema | WordReference Forums

    Oct 2, 2022 · Does using "the" here mean any cinema in general ? That means , it is equal to "I'm going to cinemas" to mean cinemas in general. But shouldn't they just say "I'm going to a cinema" ? …

  8. The room in a movie theater where the movie is shown

    Apr 13, 2017 · a. The movie theater has six theaters for showing movies. b. When the terrorist entered the theater where people were watching the movie in the movie theater, the police caught him.

  9. in the movies / at the movies / in the theater - WordReference Forums

    Apr 25, 2009 · American English If you say you saw someone or something "in the movies," you are saying that you saw it in an unspecified motion picture, perhaps in several, but you are not describing …

  10. I <saw> <have seen> the movie. | WordReference Forums

    Feb 3, 2020 · On the contrary, If I say "I have seen the movie", I'm telling you more than a completed action in the past. I believe I'm, indirectly, telling you as well that I remember about the movie and I …