there and used to

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aysaa

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Hi,

There used to be a cinema over there. (It is OK)

Is it possible to constuct a sentence as the following sentence?

-Did there use to be a cinema over there?
-Yes, there did.

Thanks...
 
I would say it is.
 
'Yes, it is' means 'yes, it is right', is that right?
 
'Yes, it is' means 'yes, it is right', is that right?
You asked, "Is it possible to construct a sentence as the following sentence?"
I responded, "I would say it is", i.e., I would say it is possible.
 
I think a sentence of the form "Didn't there use to be a cinema over there?" would be more common.
And more common still would be, "Wasn't there a cinema over there?"
I say that the negative sentence is more common because it would be said by someone remembering something from the past. This would be a more common situation than someone postulating that perhaps there used to be a cinema over there.

A sentence such as "Didn't you use to dance every Saturday night?" can't be changed to "Wasn't ..." Maybe "Weren't you once a regular dancer?"
 
-Didn't there use to be a cinema over there?
-No, there wasn't.

Can we give an answer like that instead of 'no, there didn't'?
 
That's fine.
So is "No, it used to be a car-wash. The cinema you're thinking of was on Chestnut."
 
-Didn't there use to be a cinema over there?
-No, there wasn't.

Can we give an answer like that instead of 'no, there didn't'?
Yes. And "Did there use to be be ...?"; "Yes, there was" is also possible.
 
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