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film
[ film ]
noun
- a thin layer or coating:
a film of grease on a plate.
- a thin sheet of any material:
a film of ice.
- a thin skin or membrane:
The whitish film over your eye is a cataract.
- a delicate web of filaments or fine threads:
The fabric embedded in the polyurethane is essentially a film of fiberglass.
- a thin haze, blur, or mist:
A pale film of drizzly twilight soon gave way to a dense fog.
- Photography.
- a composition of plastic or similar material made into thin sheets or strips and coated with a light-sensitive emulsion, used for taking photographs.
- a strip or roll of this.
- the coating of emulsion on such a sheet or strip or on a photographic plate.
- Movies.
- a strip of transparent material, usually cellulose triacetate, covered with a photographic emulsion and perforated along one or both edges, intended for the recording and reproduction of images.
- a similar perforated strip covered with an iron oxide emulsion magfilm, intended for the recording and reproduction of both images and sound.
- Sometimes films.
- movies collectively:
Film is the quintessential storytelling medium of the 20th century.
- the movie industry, or its productions, operations, etc.:
He wants to get into films as a director.
- movies as a genre of art or entertainment:
experimental film.
verb (used with object)
- to cover with a film, thin skin, or pellicle:
A bloom of algae films the pond every summer.
- Movies.
- to record in video format as a movie, with or without audio:
We didn't know we were being filmed.
- to make a movie of:
to film a novel.
verb (used without object)
- to become covered by a film:
The water filmed over with ice.
- Movies.
- to be reproduced in video format as a movie, especially in a specified manner:
This story films easily.
- to direct, make, or otherwise engage in the production of movies, TV shows, or other video content:
They'll be filming here for the next six months.
film
/ fɪlm /
noun
- a sequence of images of moving objects photographed by a camera and providing the optical illusion of continuous movement when projected onto a screen
- a form of entertainment, information, etc, composed of such a sequence of images and shown in a cinema, etc
- ( as modifier )
film techniques
- a thin flexible strip of cellulose coated with a photographic emulsion, used to make negatives and transparencies
- a thin coating or layer
- a thin sheet of any material, as of plastic for packaging
- a fine haze, mist, or blur
- a gauzy web of filaments or fine threads
- pathol an abnormally opaque tissue, such as the cornea in some eye diseases
verb
- to photograph with a cine camera
- to make a film of (a screenplay, event, etc)
- often foll by over to cover or become covered or coated with a film
Other Words From
- film·like adjective
- re·film verb (used with object)
- un·filmed adjective
- well-filmed adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of film1
Word History and Origins
Origin of film1
Example Sentences
And now he has entered one of film and television’s most beloved societies: the Order of the British Bad Guy.
His favourite film was Billy Elliot, the tale of a northern working-class boy who fights poverty and prejudice and poverty to become a leading ballet dancer.
Earlier this year, I interviewed your co-star, Lisa Ann Walter, and she told me how you guys bonded over classic films.
The booking comes after a year in which her signature song Murder On The Dancefloor enjoyed an unexpected resurgence, after featuring in the hit film Saltburn.
Slava, who appears in the film, is both a ceramist and a member of a Ukraine special forces unit who gives weapons training to civilians turned soldiers.
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