"I cannot go to the movie theatre" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase Non posso andare al cinema. The pronunciation will be "non POS-so an-DA-rey al THEE-ney-ma" in Italian.
"Italian cinema" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase cinema italiano. the masculine singular phrase also translates into English as "Italian cinematography," "Italian film," "Italian film-making," "Italian motion picture industry," "Italian movie," "Italian movie theater" according to context. The pronunciation will be "TCHEE-ney-ma EE-ta-LYA-no" in Italian.
Mi piace* leggere e andare al cinema is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I like reading and going to the cinema."Specifically, the object pronoun mi is "(to) me" in this context. The present indicative verb piace means "(it) is likeable/pleasing." The present infinitive leggere means "to read." The conjunction e means "and." The present infinitive andare means "to go." The word al means "to the" from the combination of the preposition a ("at, to") and the masculine singular definite article il ("the"). The masculine noun cinema translates as "cinema, movie theater."The pronunciation will be "mee PYA-tchey LED-djey-rey an-DA-rey al tchee-NEY-ma" in Italian.*It may be more correct to say piacciono (pronounced "PYAT-tcho-no" and translated as "[they] are likeable/pleasing") - since the reference is to two activities. But conversationally, Italian language-speakers may be more likely to use the single form indicated above.
"Female divinity," "goddess" and "star" are English equivalents of the Italian word diva. The feminine singular noun most famously refers to a woman of outstanding talent in opera and in such other entertainments as cinema and theater. The pronunciation for this Italian loan word in English since the nineteenth century will be "DEE-va" in Pisan Italian.
シネマ (pronounced) Shinema
Qui se fait une toile? in French means "Who goes to the cinema?" in English.
'Io vado al cinema'
"Christina, who is meeting you at the movies?" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Christina, chi ti incontra al cinema? The feminine proper noun, relative pronoun, object pronoun, present indicative, preposition with masculine singular definite article, and masculine singular noun represent a question asked of a family member, friend or peer since the second person informal singular is used. The pronunciation will be "kree-STEE-na kee teen-KON-tral tchee-NEY-ma" in Italian.
The following ten words are spelled the same in English and Italian, because they are all Italian loan words in English: Broccoli; Diva; Lasagna; Opera; Pasta; Pizza; Ravioli; Spaghetti; Spumoni; Zucchini.
The Italian word cinema is masculine, not feminine, in gender.
There is no "English" cinema. There are cinemas where you can see movies from any country.
Cinema is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "movie theaters".Specifically, the word is a masculine noun which has the same form in its singular and its plural. But the singular form may be preceded by the masculine singular definite article il("the"), and the plural by i ("the"). The pronunciation always will be "TCHEE-ne-ma" in Italian.
The Cinema Snob - 2007 Italian Batman 3-4 was released on: USA: 26 January 2011