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Discover LudwigThe phrase "glad I watched" is correct and can be used in written English.
This phrase is usually used to express feelings of satisfaction and relief after having watched something. For example, "I'm glad I watched the tutorial video before attempting to repair my car."
Exact(7)
Don't get me wrong: I'm glad I watched it.
"I'm actually glad I watched it," he writes, for all the world as if he were a newcomer to Isis atrocities.
But I'm glad I watched every minute, right up until Mrs. Clinton was abruptly cut off in midsentence so Hallmark could resume its previously scheduled programming (a movie promising "A Season for Miracles," aptly enough).
Am I glad I watched it?
Still and all, I'm glad I watched, and like I said, I'm glad I watched the show.
There's a lot this season did right, which is why I'm glad I watched it.
Similar(52)
"Re: Gary Naylor's comment: I'm actually glad I can watch a football game again without my heart beating at twice the normal rate for 90 minutes," pants Mathias Mesa.
I'm just glad I can watch from home this time.
But, with Bogdanovich sitting in front of me, I'm glad I re-watched it on that day.
I watched "In the Cold Edge" last and was glad I did.
In a way, I'm glad I didn't watch "Peaky Blinders" last year, when the first two seasons arrived on Netflix in the U.S. If I'd watched it in 2014, I would have had to grapple with whether to put it on my Top 10 roster, which was already ridiculously difficult to pare down.
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