The phrase 'You see what I see' is a common English expression used to check if someone shares your observation, understanding, or perception, often employed to confirm agreement, highlight something obvious or surprising, or establish shared experience; the meaning and tone can range from casual agreement to conspiratorial or accusatory depending on context and delivery.
Deep Dive
Prerequisite Knowledge
- No data available.
Install our extension to search inside any video instantly.
Where to go next
- No data available.
Deep Dive
(Do) you see what I see? #englishlearningmovies #tipsfilms #learnenglishwithmovies #movielessonsAdded:
You see what I see.
>> You see what I see.
>> You see what I see.
>> You see what I see.
>> I brought you all here today to try and make you see what I see.
Related Videos
WIL in Afrikaans is not WILL in English? | Ek leer Afrikaans | Part 6
afrikaanswithannelize
229 viewsβ’2026-05-28
How Brits Say British Pronunciation
MrBranicus
1K viewsβ’2026-05-30
π΅ A to Z Kids Song | Cute ABC Animation for Children
ABC_Little_Heros
10K viewsβ’2026-05-30
basque influence uniquely different spanish
Davantsi
761 viewsβ’2026-05-31
10 German Grammar Rules That Unlock the German Language | A1-B1 | Learn German
LearnGermanOriginal
357 viewsβ’2026-05-29
How To Express Disappointment In English #english #speakenglish #languagelearning #airlearn #viral
english_w_remi
6K viewsβ’2026-05-29
ONLY SENIORS WITH IQ 190+ CAN GET 2 OUT OF 20, | English grammar skills
EforEnglish161
582 viewsβ’2026-05-29
Why Japanese Has No Future Tense β Learn Japanese
FixBrokenJapanese
779 viewsβ’2026-06-02











