Seems
in sentence
11179 examples of Seems in a sentence
And if you think about it, it's even more insidious and perverse than it
seems
at first.
Now it
seems
simple, but actually I think in our society and culture in general, we have a huge problem with intent.
That all
seems
like win to me.
It
seems
that somehow, a traumatic event can unlock our ability to lead a life with fewer regrets.
Now, our data processing on this is still preliminary, but it really
seems
that these phenomenal feats that the race car drivers are performing are instinctive.
But, but this
seems
a bit unfair, right?
It
seems
that during my childhood, the blooms from my mother's gardens have healed all the way from her halo to the roots on the soles of our feet.
At first glance, the pounding site
seems
full of powerful men, but when we look closer, we see some less fortunate working on the fringes, and children too.
So what
seems
like an eccentric if tragic joke about Harry becomes a way to spread ethnic hatred.
We're politically addicted to growth because politicians want to raise tax revenue without raising taxes and a growing GDP
seems
a sure way to do that.
It
seems
to me that there are five key lessons that I've shown on this slide that are critically important for effective task shifting.
Because it
seems
to me that every society, every society, must be very intentional about how it trains its leaders.
I'll admit that there are times when it
seems
like "Mission: Impossible," but we must believe that these kids are smart.
We are all different, and a disease that I might have, if I had Alzheimer's disease or Parkinson's disease, it probably would affect me differently than if one of you had that disease, and if we both had Parkinson's disease, and we took the same medication, but we had different genetic makeup, we probably would have a different result, and it could well be that a drug that worked wonderfully for me was actually ineffective for you, and similarly, it could be that a drug that is harmful for you is safe for me, and, you know, this
seems
totally obvious, but unfortunately it is not the way that the pharmaceutical industry has been developing drugs because, until now, it hasn't had the tools.
In other words, everything you need to do in order to remember the rule and apply it
seems
to be fully developed by mid-adolescence, whereas in contrast, if you look at the last two gray bars, there's still a significant improvement in the director condition between mid-adolescence and adulthood, and what this means is that the ability to take into account someone else's perspective in order to guide ongoing behavior, which is something, by the way, that we do in everyday life all the time, is still developing in mid-to-late adolescence.
It
seems
to be related to gender.
You get these equally qualified women and men coming in and then you get these differences in grades, and it
seems
to be partly attributable to participation.
So it
seems
that our nonverbals do govern how we think and feel about ourselves, so it's not just others, but it's also ourselves.
And it
seems
to me that we talk a lot about the cloud, but every time we put something on the cloud, we give up some responsibility for it.
Okay? (Laughter) And it
seems
like a trivial result, but this is the sort of research that used to take the health system years and hundreds of thousands of dollars to accomplish.
It
seems
to indicate that indeed we have found some pigments, and since we know for sure that no other artist has painted on that wall before Vasari came in about 60 years later, well, those pigments are therefore firmly related to mural painting and most likely to Leonardo.
Something similar
seems
to happen with exaggerated conceptions of how technology is going to overpower in the very immediate run all cultural barriers, all political barriers, all geographic barriers, because at this point I know you aren't allowed to ask me questions, but when I get to this point in my lecture with my students, hands go up, and people ask me, "Yeah, but what about Facebook?"
It
seems
that writers know that the child outside of family reflects on what family truly is more than what it promotes itself to be.
Just like fear offers us protective benefits, disgust
seems
to do the same thing, except for what disgust does is keeps us away from not things that might eat us, or heights, but rather things that might poison us, or give us disease and make us sick.
People have been debating the causes of happiness for a really long time, in fact for thousands of years, but it
seems
like many of those debates remain unresolved.
It certainly
seems
that we're going about our lives, that what we're doing, who we're with, what we're thinking about, have a big influence on our happiness, and yet these are the very factors that have been very difficult, in fact almost impossible, for scientists to study.
In other words, mind-wandering very likely
seems
to be an actual cause, and not merely a consequence, of unhappiness.
It
seems
easier to imagine that than, say, citizens rising up and taking down a government that is in control of everything.
And traffic planners all around the world have tried lots of different measures: dense cities or dispersed cities, lots of roads or lots of public transport or lots of bike lanes or more information, or lots of different things, but nothing
seems
to work.
And it
seems
appropriate to start at the end, because this is a waste product that comes out of other animals, but it still contains nutrients and there are sufficient nutrients in there for dung beetles basically to make a living, and so dung beetles eat dung, and their larvae are also dung-feeders.
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