Why do we use the plural of movies in this phrase “We went to the movies last night.”?












14















I found this sentence:




We went to the movies last night.




at the following URL: https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/movies



Why do they use the plural "movies", why not use the singular "movie"?










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    Related/Duplicate question on English SE

    – BruceWayne
    Mar 28 at 21:34
















14















I found this sentence:




We went to the movies last night.




at the following URL: https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/movies



Why do they use the plural "movies", why not use the singular "movie"?










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    Related/Duplicate question on English SE

    – BruceWayne
    Mar 28 at 21:34














14












14








14


2






I found this sentence:




We went to the movies last night.




at the following URL: https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/movies



Why do they use the plural "movies", why not use the singular "movie"?










share|improve this question
















I found this sentence:




We went to the movies last night.




at the following URL: https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/movies



Why do they use the plural "movies", why not use the singular "movie"?







american-english singular-vs-plural






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 2 days ago









Draken

1174




1174










asked Mar 28 at 19:21









b2okb2ok

316314




316314








  • 2





    Related/Duplicate question on English SE

    – BruceWayne
    Mar 28 at 21:34














  • 2





    Related/Duplicate question on English SE

    – BruceWayne
    Mar 28 at 21:34








2




2





Related/Duplicate question on English SE

– BruceWayne
Mar 28 at 21:34





Related/Duplicate question on English SE

– BruceWayne
Mar 28 at 21:34










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















20














In the very early days, movies were very short (about 10-15 minutes), so people watched several movies in a row. Even when feature films were developed, there was typically a newsreel, a short and the feature.



Also, they were originally called 'moving pictures', which quite naturally became 'movies'. 'A movie' came slightly later. (I think people referred to 'a film' before they referred to 'a movie'.)






share|improve this answer





















  • 5





    Do you have a source for that? Just curious, as it's not the reason given in the Answer in this identical question which uses MacMillan as a source.

    – BruceWayne
    Mar 28 at 21:34








  • 2





    @BruceWayne From my own knowledge of history and language, I believe this answer to be entirely accurate, but you're right- sources are always appreciated. It should be noted, however, your linked answer essentially says "the dictionary definition is thus" whereas this answer says "the reason the word means this is thus". The two are complimentary, not contradictory. The MacMillian definition for "movie" even references the relation to "moving pictures' though it stops short of claiming it to be a contraction of the phrase.

    – jmbpiano
    2 days ago













  • The OED has a citation for "movie" from 1913, which is sufficiently close to the earliest for "movies" (1909) that I'm not sure we can really say that the singular came later. At that time, the word seems to have been always written in quotes, suggesting that it was felt to be a very informal term that might be common in spoken English but was rarely written down, again making it hard to determine the relative age.

    – David Richerby
    2 days ago








  • 1





    The first section in particular feels like a meaning added in retrospect. It definitely needs to be referenced if it's being stated as a true factor in the etymology. If no reference can be found, it may be best to move it second and make it clear that it's an interesting additional bit of trivia. There is currently no evidence that it influenced the plurality of the term "Movies".

    – Bilkokuya
    2 days ago





















19














Because, as that definition explained, "movies" in that context refers to the movie theater, which typically has several showings for a movie. If you want to refer to the showing you specifically attended, you would say "we went to a movie last night."






share|improve this answer



















  • 2





    Could you include a reference for this please?

    – Bilkokuya
    2 days ago



















16















Do you want to go to the movies tonight?



Do you want to go to the cinema tonight?




Both the movies (AmE) or the cinema (BrE) refer to a place where you can watch a movie (AmE) or a film (BrE). It is usually a movie theater (AmE) or a cinema (BrE).




Would you like to go and see a film tonight?



I thought we might get something to eat and then go to see a movie.







share|improve this answer





















  • 7





    "The cinema" and "a film" are certainly valid in AmE, they're just a bit formal for casual conversation.

    – Kevin
    2 days ago






  • 3





    You can also say "the pictures" in BrE although it may sound a bit old-fashioned.

    – Richard
    2 days ago






  • 4





    @Kevin Ya, this answer is a bit weird in how hard of a distinction it makes between AmE and BrE. AmE speakers use "cinema" too. One of the largest theater chains is called Regal Cinemas. And "film" is extremely common to hear in AmE. It's interchangeable with "movie", although a bit less common. It's not like they call it "movie school".

    – only_pro
    2 days ago














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3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









20














In the very early days, movies were very short (about 10-15 minutes), so people watched several movies in a row. Even when feature films were developed, there was typically a newsreel, a short and the feature.



Also, they were originally called 'moving pictures', which quite naturally became 'movies'. 'A movie' came slightly later. (I think people referred to 'a film' before they referred to 'a movie'.)






share|improve this answer





















  • 5





    Do you have a source for that? Just curious, as it's not the reason given in the Answer in this identical question which uses MacMillan as a source.

    – BruceWayne
    Mar 28 at 21:34








  • 2





    @BruceWayne From my own knowledge of history and language, I believe this answer to be entirely accurate, but you're right- sources are always appreciated. It should be noted, however, your linked answer essentially says "the dictionary definition is thus" whereas this answer says "the reason the word means this is thus". The two are complimentary, not contradictory. The MacMillian definition for "movie" even references the relation to "moving pictures' though it stops short of claiming it to be a contraction of the phrase.

    – jmbpiano
    2 days ago













  • The OED has a citation for "movie" from 1913, which is sufficiently close to the earliest for "movies" (1909) that I'm not sure we can really say that the singular came later. At that time, the word seems to have been always written in quotes, suggesting that it was felt to be a very informal term that might be common in spoken English but was rarely written down, again making it hard to determine the relative age.

    – David Richerby
    2 days ago








  • 1





    The first section in particular feels like a meaning added in retrospect. It definitely needs to be referenced if it's being stated as a true factor in the etymology. If no reference can be found, it may be best to move it second and make it clear that it's an interesting additional bit of trivia. There is currently no evidence that it influenced the plurality of the term "Movies".

    – Bilkokuya
    2 days ago


















20














In the very early days, movies were very short (about 10-15 minutes), so people watched several movies in a row. Even when feature films were developed, there was typically a newsreel, a short and the feature.



Also, they were originally called 'moving pictures', which quite naturally became 'movies'. 'A movie' came slightly later. (I think people referred to 'a film' before they referred to 'a movie'.)






share|improve this answer





















  • 5





    Do you have a source for that? Just curious, as it's not the reason given in the Answer in this identical question which uses MacMillan as a source.

    – BruceWayne
    Mar 28 at 21:34








  • 2





    @BruceWayne From my own knowledge of history and language, I believe this answer to be entirely accurate, but you're right- sources are always appreciated. It should be noted, however, your linked answer essentially says "the dictionary definition is thus" whereas this answer says "the reason the word means this is thus". The two are complimentary, not contradictory. The MacMillian definition for "movie" even references the relation to "moving pictures' though it stops short of claiming it to be a contraction of the phrase.

    – jmbpiano
    2 days ago













  • The OED has a citation for "movie" from 1913, which is sufficiently close to the earliest for "movies" (1909) that I'm not sure we can really say that the singular came later. At that time, the word seems to have been always written in quotes, suggesting that it was felt to be a very informal term that might be common in spoken English but was rarely written down, again making it hard to determine the relative age.

    – David Richerby
    2 days ago








  • 1





    The first section in particular feels like a meaning added in retrospect. It definitely needs to be referenced if it's being stated as a true factor in the etymology. If no reference can be found, it may be best to move it second and make it clear that it's an interesting additional bit of trivia. There is currently no evidence that it influenced the plurality of the term "Movies".

    – Bilkokuya
    2 days ago
















20












20








20







In the very early days, movies were very short (about 10-15 minutes), so people watched several movies in a row. Even when feature films were developed, there was typically a newsreel, a short and the feature.



Also, they were originally called 'moving pictures', which quite naturally became 'movies'. 'A movie' came slightly later. (I think people referred to 'a film' before they referred to 'a movie'.)






share|improve this answer















In the very early days, movies were very short (about 10-15 minutes), so people watched several movies in a row. Even when feature films were developed, there was typically a newsreel, a short and the feature.



Also, they were originally called 'moving pictures', which quite naturally became 'movies'. 'A movie' came slightly later. (I think people referred to 'a film' before they referred to 'a movie'.)







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Mar 28 at 20:16

























answered Mar 28 at 20:00









SydneySydney

5,0522816




5,0522816








  • 5





    Do you have a source for that? Just curious, as it's not the reason given in the Answer in this identical question which uses MacMillan as a source.

    – BruceWayne
    Mar 28 at 21:34








  • 2





    @BruceWayne From my own knowledge of history and language, I believe this answer to be entirely accurate, but you're right- sources are always appreciated. It should be noted, however, your linked answer essentially says "the dictionary definition is thus" whereas this answer says "the reason the word means this is thus". The two are complimentary, not contradictory. The MacMillian definition for "movie" even references the relation to "moving pictures' though it stops short of claiming it to be a contraction of the phrase.

    – jmbpiano
    2 days ago













  • The OED has a citation for "movie" from 1913, which is sufficiently close to the earliest for "movies" (1909) that I'm not sure we can really say that the singular came later. At that time, the word seems to have been always written in quotes, suggesting that it was felt to be a very informal term that might be common in spoken English but was rarely written down, again making it hard to determine the relative age.

    – David Richerby
    2 days ago








  • 1





    The first section in particular feels like a meaning added in retrospect. It definitely needs to be referenced if it's being stated as a true factor in the etymology. If no reference can be found, it may be best to move it second and make it clear that it's an interesting additional bit of trivia. There is currently no evidence that it influenced the plurality of the term "Movies".

    – Bilkokuya
    2 days ago
















  • 5





    Do you have a source for that? Just curious, as it's not the reason given in the Answer in this identical question which uses MacMillan as a source.

    – BruceWayne
    Mar 28 at 21:34








  • 2





    @BruceWayne From my own knowledge of history and language, I believe this answer to be entirely accurate, but you're right- sources are always appreciated. It should be noted, however, your linked answer essentially says "the dictionary definition is thus" whereas this answer says "the reason the word means this is thus". The two are complimentary, not contradictory. The MacMillian definition for "movie" even references the relation to "moving pictures' though it stops short of claiming it to be a contraction of the phrase.

    – jmbpiano
    2 days ago













  • The OED has a citation for "movie" from 1913, which is sufficiently close to the earliest for "movies" (1909) that I'm not sure we can really say that the singular came later. At that time, the word seems to have been always written in quotes, suggesting that it was felt to be a very informal term that might be common in spoken English but was rarely written down, again making it hard to determine the relative age.

    – David Richerby
    2 days ago








  • 1





    The first section in particular feels like a meaning added in retrospect. It definitely needs to be referenced if it's being stated as a true factor in the etymology. If no reference can be found, it may be best to move it second and make it clear that it's an interesting additional bit of trivia. There is currently no evidence that it influenced the plurality of the term "Movies".

    – Bilkokuya
    2 days ago










5




5





Do you have a source for that? Just curious, as it's not the reason given in the Answer in this identical question which uses MacMillan as a source.

– BruceWayne
Mar 28 at 21:34







Do you have a source for that? Just curious, as it's not the reason given in the Answer in this identical question which uses MacMillan as a source.

– BruceWayne
Mar 28 at 21:34






2




2





@BruceWayne From my own knowledge of history and language, I believe this answer to be entirely accurate, but you're right- sources are always appreciated. It should be noted, however, your linked answer essentially says "the dictionary definition is thus" whereas this answer says "the reason the word means this is thus". The two are complimentary, not contradictory. The MacMillian definition for "movie" even references the relation to "moving pictures' though it stops short of claiming it to be a contraction of the phrase.

– jmbpiano
2 days ago







@BruceWayne From my own knowledge of history and language, I believe this answer to be entirely accurate, but you're right- sources are always appreciated. It should be noted, however, your linked answer essentially says "the dictionary definition is thus" whereas this answer says "the reason the word means this is thus". The two are complimentary, not contradictory. The MacMillian definition for "movie" even references the relation to "moving pictures' though it stops short of claiming it to be a contraction of the phrase.

– jmbpiano
2 days ago















The OED has a citation for "movie" from 1913, which is sufficiently close to the earliest for "movies" (1909) that I'm not sure we can really say that the singular came later. At that time, the word seems to have been always written in quotes, suggesting that it was felt to be a very informal term that might be common in spoken English but was rarely written down, again making it hard to determine the relative age.

– David Richerby
2 days ago







The OED has a citation for "movie" from 1913, which is sufficiently close to the earliest for "movies" (1909) that I'm not sure we can really say that the singular came later. At that time, the word seems to have been always written in quotes, suggesting that it was felt to be a very informal term that might be common in spoken English but was rarely written down, again making it hard to determine the relative age.

– David Richerby
2 days ago






1




1





The first section in particular feels like a meaning added in retrospect. It definitely needs to be referenced if it's being stated as a true factor in the etymology. If no reference can be found, it may be best to move it second and make it clear that it's an interesting additional bit of trivia. There is currently no evidence that it influenced the plurality of the term "Movies".

– Bilkokuya
2 days ago







The first section in particular feels like a meaning added in retrospect. It definitely needs to be referenced if it's being stated as a true factor in the etymology. If no reference can be found, it may be best to move it second and make it clear that it's an interesting additional bit of trivia. There is currently no evidence that it influenced the plurality of the term "Movies".

– Bilkokuya
2 days ago















19














Because, as that definition explained, "movies" in that context refers to the movie theater, which typically has several showings for a movie. If you want to refer to the showing you specifically attended, you would say "we went to a movie last night."






share|improve this answer



















  • 2





    Could you include a reference for this please?

    – Bilkokuya
    2 days ago
















19














Because, as that definition explained, "movies" in that context refers to the movie theater, which typically has several showings for a movie. If you want to refer to the showing you specifically attended, you would say "we went to a movie last night."






share|improve this answer



















  • 2





    Could you include a reference for this please?

    – Bilkokuya
    2 days ago














19












19








19







Because, as that definition explained, "movies" in that context refers to the movie theater, which typically has several showings for a movie. If you want to refer to the showing you specifically attended, you would say "we went to a movie last night."






share|improve this answer













Because, as that definition explained, "movies" in that context refers to the movie theater, which typically has several showings for a movie. If you want to refer to the showing you specifically attended, you would say "we went to a movie last night."







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Mar 28 at 19:47









pboss3010pboss3010

91415




91415








  • 2





    Could you include a reference for this please?

    – Bilkokuya
    2 days ago














  • 2





    Could you include a reference for this please?

    – Bilkokuya
    2 days ago








2




2





Could you include a reference for this please?

– Bilkokuya
2 days ago





Could you include a reference for this please?

– Bilkokuya
2 days ago











16















Do you want to go to the movies tonight?



Do you want to go to the cinema tonight?




Both the movies (AmE) or the cinema (BrE) refer to a place where you can watch a movie (AmE) or a film (BrE). It is usually a movie theater (AmE) or a cinema (BrE).




Would you like to go and see a film tonight?



I thought we might get something to eat and then go to see a movie.







share|improve this answer





















  • 7





    "The cinema" and "a film" are certainly valid in AmE, they're just a bit formal for casual conversation.

    – Kevin
    2 days ago






  • 3





    You can also say "the pictures" in BrE although it may sound a bit old-fashioned.

    – Richard
    2 days ago






  • 4





    @Kevin Ya, this answer is a bit weird in how hard of a distinction it makes between AmE and BrE. AmE speakers use "cinema" too. One of the largest theater chains is called Regal Cinemas. And "film" is extremely common to hear in AmE. It's interchangeable with "movie", although a bit less common. It's not like they call it "movie school".

    – only_pro
    2 days ago


















16















Do you want to go to the movies tonight?



Do you want to go to the cinema tonight?




Both the movies (AmE) or the cinema (BrE) refer to a place where you can watch a movie (AmE) or a film (BrE). It is usually a movie theater (AmE) or a cinema (BrE).




Would you like to go and see a film tonight?



I thought we might get something to eat and then go to see a movie.







share|improve this answer





















  • 7





    "The cinema" and "a film" are certainly valid in AmE, they're just a bit formal for casual conversation.

    – Kevin
    2 days ago






  • 3





    You can also say "the pictures" in BrE although it may sound a bit old-fashioned.

    – Richard
    2 days ago






  • 4





    @Kevin Ya, this answer is a bit weird in how hard of a distinction it makes between AmE and BrE. AmE speakers use "cinema" too. One of the largest theater chains is called Regal Cinemas. And "film" is extremely common to hear in AmE. It's interchangeable with "movie", although a bit less common. It's not like they call it "movie school".

    – only_pro
    2 days ago
















16












16








16








Do you want to go to the movies tonight?



Do you want to go to the cinema tonight?




Both the movies (AmE) or the cinema (BrE) refer to a place where you can watch a movie (AmE) or a film (BrE). It is usually a movie theater (AmE) or a cinema (BrE).




Would you like to go and see a film tonight?



I thought we might get something to eat and then go to see a movie.







share|improve this answer
















Do you want to go to the movies tonight?



Do you want to go to the cinema tonight?




Both the movies (AmE) or the cinema (BrE) refer to a place where you can watch a movie (AmE) or a film (BrE). It is usually a movie theater (AmE) or a cinema (BrE).




Would you like to go and see a film tonight?



I thought we might get something to eat and then go to see a movie.








share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Mar 28 at 20:00

























answered Mar 28 at 19:55









Andrew TobilkoAndrew Tobilko

2,339624




2,339624








  • 7





    "The cinema" and "a film" are certainly valid in AmE, they're just a bit formal for casual conversation.

    – Kevin
    2 days ago






  • 3





    You can also say "the pictures" in BrE although it may sound a bit old-fashioned.

    – Richard
    2 days ago






  • 4





    @Kevin Ya, this answer is a bit weird in how hard of a distinction it makes between AmE and BrE. AmE speakers use "cinema" too. One of the largest theater chains is called Regal Cinemas. And "film" is extremely common to hear in AmE. It's interchangeable with "movie", although a bit less common. It's not like they call it "movie school".

    – only_pro
    2 days ago
















  • 7





    "The cinema" and "a film" are certainly valid in AmE, they're just a bit formal for casual conversation.

    – Kevin
    2 days ago






  • 3





    You can also say "the pictures" in BrE although it may sound a bit old-fashioned.

    – Richard
    2 days ago






  • 4





    @Kevin Ya, this answer is a bit weird in how hard of a distinction it makes between AmE and BrE. AmE speakers use "cinema" too. One of the largest theater chains is called Regal Cinemas. And "film" is extremely common to hear in AmE. It's interchangeable with "movie", although a bit less common. It's not like they call it "movie school".

    – only_pro
    2 days ago










7




7





"The cinema" and "a film" are certainly valid in AmE, they're just a bit formal for casual conversation.

– Kevin
2 days ago





"The cinema" and "a film" are certainly valid in AmE, they're just a bit formal for casual conversation.

– Kevin
2 days ago




3




3





You can also say "the pictures" in BrE although it may sound a bit old-fashioned.

– Richard
2 days ago





You can also say "the pictures" in BrE although it may sound a bit old-fashioned.

– Richard
2 days ago




4




4





@Kevin Ya, this answer is a bit weird in how hard of a distinction it makes between AmE and BrE. AmE speakers use "cinema" too. One of the largest theater chains is called Regal Cinemas. And "film" is extremely common to hear in AmE. It's interchangeable with "movie", although a bit less common. It's not like they call it "movie school".

– only_pro
2 days ago







@Kevin Ya, this answer is a bit weird in how hard of a distinction it makes between AmE and BrE. AmE speakers use "cinema" too. One of the largest theater chains is called Regal Cinemas. And "film" is extremely common to hear in AmE. It's interchangeable with "movie", although a bit less common. It's not like they call it "movie school".

– only_pro
2 days ago




















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