Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] seem " in BNC.
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1 | To take comfort in the simple truth about Hard Times : that however rotten things might seem at the moment , they will most assuredly seem altogether quaint fifty years from now . |
2 | So I 'd much rather seem a bit weak with Mrs Joe than shout at her , or hurt her , or hit her . |
3 | In the remaining solo items you will hear a magical sense of undulation in ‘ Des Abends ’ and in the central langsamer of ‘ Intermezzo I ’ ( Kreisleriana ) Cortot shows how it is possible to clarify writing which can so easily seem wilfully obscure . |
4 | Only so can we hope to retain their enthusiasm for what must inevitably sometimes seem a long and weary journey . |
5 | The idea that there is something of a lag between terminology and social system is interesting and there does indeed sometimes seem to be this type of gap . |
6 | A combination of the ideology of the market-place , public hostility to nuclear power and fears of high energy prices adding to the problems of an uncompetitive manufacturing industry may have resulted in a setback for nuclear power in Britain , but fossil fuels would no longer seem such overwhelmingly good value , according to Chris Patten , if their wider environmental costs were allocated and more fully reflected in prices . |
7 | While that wo n't please some of his backbenchers , others will breath a sigh of relief that at least Britain will no longer seem to be standing alone against the rest of the community . |
8 | It will certainly not seem long if you work consistently toward daily targets , in a few weeks you 'll be doing things you have n't done for years , or never thought possible . |
9 | It would certainly not seem sensible to teach these skills in a context which did not allow children to put them to use immediately , nor would it seem sensible to teach them through sets of exercises independent of any meaningful content area . |
10 | In reading Greenblatt it can too often seem that discussions of such selective parts of a play may appear to stand for the whole . |