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Origin and history of cinema

cinema(n.)

1899, "movie hall," from French cinéma, shortened from cinématographe "device for projecting a series of photographs in rapid succession so as to produce the illusion of movement," coined 1890s by Lumiere brothers, who invented the technology, from Latinized form of Greek kinēmat-, combining form of kinēma "movement," from kinein "to move" (from PIE root *keie- "to set in motion"). For the second element in the French compound, see -graphy.

The word was earlier in English in its fuller form, cinematograph (1896), but this has been displaced by the short form. Other old words for such a system were vitascope (Edison, 1895), animatograph (1898). The meaning "movies collectively, especially as an art form" recorded by 1914. Cinéma vérité is 1963, from French.

Entries linking to cinema

abbreviation of cinema used in compounds or as a stand-alone, 1928, perhaps partly from French ciné (1917).

1953, proprietary name for wide-screen movie technology; see cinema + scope (n.2).

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Trends of cinema

adapted from books.google.com/ngrams/ with a 7-year moving average; ngrams are probably unreliable.

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