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View synonyms for seem

seem

[seem]

verb (used without object)

  1. to appear to be, feel, do, etc..

    She seems better this morning.

  2. to appear to one's own senses, mind, observation, judgment, etc..

    It seems to me that someone is calling.

  3. to appear to exist.

    There seems no need to go now.

  4. to appear to be true, probable, or evident.

    It seems likely to rain.

  5. 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

  1. (copula) to appear to the mind or eye; look

    this seems nice

    the car seems to be running well

  2. to give the impression of existing; appear to be

    there seems no need for all this nonsense

  3. used to diminish the force of a following infinitive to be polite, more noncommittal, etc

    I can't seem to get through to you

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Other Word Forms

  • seemer noun
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Word History and Origins

Origin of seem1

First recorded before 1150–1200; Middle English seme, from Old Norse sœma “to befit, beseem,” derivative of sœmr “fitting, seemly”; akin to sōmi “honor”
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Word History and Origins

Origin of seem1

C12: perhaps from Old Norse soma to beseem, from sœmr befitting; related to Old English sēman to reconcile; see same
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Synonym Study

Seem, appear, look refer to an outward aspect that may or may not be contrary to reality. Seem is applied to something that has an aspect of truth and probability: It seems warmer today. Appear suggests the giving of an impression that may be superficial or illusory: The house appears to be deserted. Look more vividly suggests the use of the eye (literally or figuratively) or the aspect as perceived by the eye: She looked very much frightened.
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

On the plane that took him back to the US, the president seemed to play down the extent of their conversation.

From BBC

“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.

From Salon

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".

From BBC

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