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seem
[seem]
verb (used without object)
to appear to be, feel, do, etc..
She seems better this morning.
to appear to one's own senses, mind, observation, judgment, etc..
It seems to me that someone is calling.
to appear to exist.
There seems no need to go now.
to appear to be true, probable, or evident.
It seems likely to rain.
to give the outward appearance of being or to pretend to be.
He only seems friendly because he wants you to like him.
seem
/ siːm /
verb
(copula) to appear to the mind or eye; look
this seems nice
the car seems to be running well
to give the impression of existing; appear to be
there seems no need for all this nonsense
used to diminish the force of a following infinitive to be polite, more noncommittal, etc
I can't seem to get through to you
Other Word Forms
- seemer noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of seem1
Word History and Origins
Origin of seem1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
On the plane that took him back to the US, the president seemed to play down the extent of their conversation.
“It just seems really appropriate because it ties in present-day immigrant communities with the longer history of Mexican immigrant communities.”
People seem to be snapping all over the festival.
Next to ChatGPT’s incursion into daily life, which succeeded without our permission or, just as likely, our notice, a culture-wide robot invasion seems much farther down the road.
McEwan told Radio 4 he would "expect questions" if an alleged physical threat had been made, but that armed police officers "seems a bit heavy-handed".
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