Yes.
no it would be correct to say he or she dances like her
"Lets go to the movies?"
She is a girl like me, would be proper English.
It's like in English when we say cinema, but we pronounce the E like an AY.It's spelt cinéma in French, but you say cinAYma.
If you're at the cinema with her, aren't you already "out"? and you means me and the Answer is for you you are being stupid
J'aime le cinéma
No. For plural, like are, you can say have been. For singular you would say has been.
It depends on what you are asking. If you are talking about dance as a form of entertainment, then this sentence would be correct. If you are asking whether someone enjoys participating in dance as an activity, it would be correct to ask, "Do you like to dance?"
"If you were he..." is correct.
The correct way to say that would be something like "the people were taken to the camp."
aimez-vous le cinéma
"They are like you and me" is the correct response. After the preposition "like", the direct object pronoun is used, not the subject pronoun.