APPEAR vs SEEM: NOUN
- Appearance.
- N/A
APPEAR vs SEEM: VERB
- Come into sight or view
- Come into being or existence, or appear on the scene
- Be issued or published
- Appear as a character on stage or appear in a play, etc.
- Give a certain impression or have a certain outward aspect
- Seem to be true, probable, or apparent
- Present oneself formally, as before a (judicial) authority
- Appear to one's own mind or opinion
- Appear to exist
- Seem to be true, probable, or apparent
- Give a certain impression or have a certain outward aspect
- To appear; to look outwardly; to be perceived as.
APPEAR vs SEEM: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To be published or made available to the public.
- To present oneself formally before a court as defendant, plaintiff, or counsel.
- To come or perform before the public.
- To come or be in sight; to be in view; to become visible.
- To give the impression of being in a certain way; seem.
- To come into existence.
- To be shown or included.
- To become visible.
- To be likely or evident.
- To come before the public.
- To stand in presence of some authority, tribunal, or superior person, to answer a charge, plead a cause, or the like; to present one's self as a party or advocate before a court, or as a person to be tried.
- To become visible to the apprehension of the mind; to be known as a subject of observation or comprehension, or as a thing proved; to be obvious or manifest.
- To seem; to have a certain semblance; to look.
- It appears; it is understood as true; it is said.
- To appear, or to appear to be; to have a show or semblance; to present an appearance; to look; to strike one's apprehension or fancy as being; to be taken as.
- To appear to be probable or evident.
- To give the impression of being in a certain way; appear to be.
- Used to call attention to one's impression or understanding about something, especially in weakening the force of a following infinitive.
APPEAR vs SEEM: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To befit; to beseem.
APPEAR vs SEEM: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Synonyms
- . To be understood; be intelligible: as, “Do I now appear?” Cotgrave.
- To seem; have a certain semblance or appearance; look: as, he appeared to be wise; it appears to me that this is unsafe; he appears very old.
- To be obvious; be known, as a subject of observation or comprehension; be clear or made clear by evidence.
- To come or be placed before the public; come to the notice of the public: as, the actor appeared only once a week; his history appeared in 1880.
- To stand in presence, as parties or advocates before a court; make appearance.
- To come or be in sight; become visible by approach or by emerging from concealment; be exposed to view.
- To become; beseem; befit; be fit, suitable, or proper for.
- Synonyms Seem, Look, Appear. Look differs from seem only in more vividly suggesting the use of the eye, literally or figuratively: as, it looks (or seems) right. Appear is somewhat stronger, having sometimes the sense of coming into view or coming to seem. Each may stand for that which is probably true, or in opposition to that which is true: not to seem, but to be; the seeming and the real. Should seem and would seem are equally correct, but differ in strength. To say that a thing should seem to be true is to say that it ought to seem so or almost necessarily seems so; to say that it would seem true is to say that, while there are reasons for holding an opposite view, the preponderance of evidence is on the side of its being true.
- To appear to one's self; imagine; feel as if: as, I still seem to hear his voice; he still seemed to feel the motion of the vessel.
- In an impersonal reflexive use, to appear: with the person in the dative, later apparently in the nominative as the quasi-subject of seem in the sense of ‘think, consider’: as, me seem, him seemed, they seemed, the people seemed, it seems to me, it seemed to him, them, or the people (meseems being often written as a single word).
- To appear; be seen; show one's self or itself; hence, to assume an air; pretend.
- To appear; have or present an appearance of being; appear to be; look or look like; in a restricted sense, be in appearance or as regards appearance only.
- To be fit or suitable.
APPEAR vs SEEM: RELATED WORDS
- Include, Displayed, See, Seems, Submit, Are, Resemble, Reveal, Indicate, Appearance, Come out, Reappear, Come along, Look, Seem
- Believe, Sound, Like, Resemble, Deem, Pretend, Looks, Think, Are, Suggest, Tend, Feel, Appears, Look, Appear
APPEAR vs SEEM: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Represent, Exist, Testify, Present, Show, Include, See, Submit, Are, Resemble, Reveal, Indicate, Appearance, Come out, Look
- Consider, Find, Believe, Sound, Like, Resemble, Deem, Pretend, Think, Are, Suggest, Tend, Feel, Look, Appear
APPEAR vs SEEM: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- This does not appear to be legally problematic.
- Attorneys should appear confident and give clear evidence.
- Your words will appear in the text field.
- If your name does not appear on these calendars, please notify the criminal division clerk that your name does not appear.
- Clipped shadows appear in blue, and clipped highlights appear in red.
- The compensation we receive from our partners may impact how and where companies appear on our site, including the order in which they appear.
- If I am unable to personally appear for you, I will instruct another experienced lawyer to appear on my behalf.
- Pupils will often appear in these images, which may appear in local or national newspapers, on television or online.
- Because your termination will not appear in any public database, it is unlikely to appear in a standard employment background check.
- Each party wants his or her expenses to appear high and income to appear low.
- The employees seem to just make up answers.
- All the rest seem to be properly connected.
- Indeed, the equations and models seem straightforward enough.
- Seem ashamed, or let people see my shame.
- Ride quality and noise seem excellent so far.
- Surprising as it may seem, sponges are animals.
- In such cases we will think, upon reflection, that what we seem to sense is something we only seem to sense.
- You dismiss the qualities that other people seem to admire about him, since to you his virtues seem insincere or unimpressive.
- It may seem simple and it may seem cliche, but I will NEVER stop loving you.
- Each time they seem to take a shot gun approach and replace something which does not seem to fix the problem.
APPEAR vs SEEM: QUESTIONS
- When did organic molecules appear in living things?
- When did Karrine karrines first appear on confessions?
- What episode does Bobby first appear in supernatural?
- When did Constantine first appear on 'the Waverider'?
- What episode does Princess Mindy appear in SpongeBob?
- What episode does Shawn Ashmore appear on Smallville?
- What episode of Stanley does Punxsutawney Phil appear?
- When do Montgomery tubercles appear during pregnancy?
- Why do chlorophyll-containing tissues appear green?
- What percentage of fluorescent diamonds appear oily?
- What does it mean to make something seem unimportant?
- What is the seem assessment and intervention center?
- Why extraterrestrial life may not seem entirely alien?
- Why does Elizabeth seem so insubstantial in Frankenstein?
- Does Springsteen make rock seem important once again?
- Does quantum mechanics make the world seem stranger?
- Why does persuasion/deception seem so ridiculously powerful?
- Why does repetition make things seem more plausible?
- Are the Appalachian mountains taller than they seem?
- Which passions does Hobbes seem most interested in?