· You can say "I'm watching Signal " to mean that you are following the series and you watch every episode, but when you refer to specific episodes, even as loosely as you do by using … · Q: What are you doing?" A: I am watching a movie. It doesn't say anything about your availability to talk, purely that you are watching a movie. · I'm going to watch a movie later today. I'm watching a movie later today. What's the difference between these two? If I'm not mistaken, both mean that the decision to watch a movie was … · Hola! How would you say "I am watching a TV series"? Not in the sense that I am literally watching it right now, but watching it over a number of days. Should I just use the present tense? … · You are not watching it now. (I say 'probable interpretation' because sometimes the context causes us to understand it differently.) Here is a previous thread discussing a different … · Your options are good, the options suggested by your student are also possible. While Chelsea's mother was watching While Chelseas's mother watched These are both absolutely fine. … · Hello. In time clauses it iw like this I will call you when i am warching TV later. What if I I use while instead of when ? I will call you while I'll be watching tv ? · Hello everybody. I'd like to know whether it's more correct to use the past simple or the past simple continuous when referring to an action occurred in the past, "yesterday" for example, but … · Yes, that's exactly right. 'I watched' means I saw the beginning, middle, and end of it. 'When' here doesn't actually mean "after the end", but that's normally the time when you would think …