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- infinitives - When is seems to be used instead of seems? - English . . .
She seems (to be) a nice girl infinitives, They seem to have made a mistake like, The village seems (like) a nice place for a holiday that- and if-clauses It seems as if the night is never going to end With there seem(s) to be is used There seem to be a lot of mistakes There seems to be some problem
- What is the difference between it seems and it looks like?
"It seems that like" and "It looks like" are also equivalent, but a verb is expected to follow -> "Look at that fish, it looks seems dead", "Look at that fish, it looks like seems that like it's dead " On another note, you can also use a noun after "looks like" and "seems like", but not after "seems that" -> "that fish looks seems like a shark "
- How to use seems to be - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
As for It seems to be activated vs It seems to have been activated - the first is taking activated as an adjective, which is less common (except in the phrase activated charcoal) The second it is the past participle of activate, so that is a passive clause, and seems to me to fit better
- Differences among It feels. . . , It looks. . . , and It seems. . .
This situation seems dangerous to me "Seems" can refer to hearing, The note seems flat The note sounds flat "Seems" can refer to taste: The tomato seems salty The tomato tastes salty If there is any doubt as to which, "seems" , "looks" , or "feels" to use, use "seems"; it can serve more meanings than the others
- grammar - Using the structure seem - English Language Learners Stack . . .
He seems nice He seems a nice man You can also use 'to be' after seem in these sentences, without any difference in meaning, such as: He seems to be nice He seems to be a nice man However, if you want to use seem in front of a noun, you should use a to-infinitive So the sentence should be as follows: It seems to be water
- grammar - It seems to be good OR It seems good - English Language . . .
But moving from *seems (-s) to to (t-) is an easier movement for the tongue Which is a long way of saying that the first sentence flows better for me, both in terms of hearing the syllables and consonants working together and also in the ease of speaking the phrase
- seems seemed as if - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
He seems as if he didn't sleep for days (corrected) He seems as if he hadn't slept for days The first sentence can mean that "he went through stretches of days at a time when he did not sleep" - the did makes it seem like he purposefully prevented himself from sleeping The second sentence won't express that, without context
- phrase usage - thrive in vs thrive on - English Language Learners Stack . . .
She seems to thrive on stress is a very good usage For the second one, it is also quite correct, but if I were to rewrite that sentence using 'thrive', I would say `She thrives even in stressful situations' I would say you have a good understanding though –
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