guardare un film?
"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.
Vediamo un film! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Let's see a movie!" The statement also translates as "Let's see one film!" or "We see a film" according to English contexts . The pronunciation will be "vey-DYA-mo oon feelm" in Pisan Italian.
It is unknown at the moment as the movie just came out the 13th March in France. So if it should be translated, it wouldn't be before several months...
"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.
Yes.
I'm almost positive you can buy the movie at FYE or SUNCOAST. You buy it, then there should be a languages link in one of the menus. You can watch it in Italian with English subtitles or just watch it in English!
Ruby red was made into a movie but it was in German and I don't know if it will be translated to English
To dub is to provide a soundtrack (translation) to a foreign movie.Eg. Whenver Italy screens a Hollywood Movie, the whole film is screened in Italian. The film has been dubbed into Italian.English dub is when the people talk in English. Lets say the show you are watching is from Japan if it is in English dub then instead of it being in Japanese it will be in English.
"The belt" and "the ribbon" are respective English equivalents of the Italian and Spanish phrase la cinta. The feminine singular definite article and noun also translates into English as "city limits," "cornice," "gunwale," "molding," or "town walls" according to Italian contexts and as "conveyor belt," "film, "movie," "spider plant," or "tape" depending upon Spanish contexts. The respective pronunciations will be "la TCHEEN-ta" in Italian and "la SEEN-ta" in Latin American Spanish or "la THEEN-ta" in Castilian Spanish.
L'amore è nell'aria! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Love is in the air!" The declarative/exclamatory statement most famously references a popular song from the movie Il Re Leone ("The Lion King"). The pronunciation will be "la-MO-rey eh nel-LA-rya" in Italian.
what had been built for the movie?
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.