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Example sentences for "who seems"

  • Carteret to talk with me, who seems to think himself safe as to his particular, but do doubt what will become of the whole kingdom, things being so broke in pieces.

  • I am mightily pleased with the Judge, who seems a very rational, learned, and uncorrupt man, though our success do shake me.

  • In his twenty-first year Carlyle again succeeded his Annan predecessor (who seems to have given dissatisfaction by some vagaries of severity) as mathematical teacher in the main school of Kirkcaldy.

  • For the original conception, the credit must be given to Weitzel, who seems indeed to have formed a very similar scheme when he first occupied La Fourche.

  • Read all the papers relating to the education of the Princess Victoria, who seems to have been admirably brought up.

  • I told the Duke, who seems disposed to make it an European question.

  • I should like for Durtal, before we hunt up the canon, to see your friend GĂ©vingey, who seems to be best and most intimately acquainted with him.

  • Perhaps we are to understand that this Inca, like his father, who seems to have been the original author of the saying, meant to sneer at the elaborate worship bestowed on the Sun, while Pachacamac was neglected, as far as ritual went.

  • Miss Angus mentioned this vision as a bore, she being more interested in the stockbroker, who seems to have inherited what was once in the possession of another stockbroker--'the smile of Charles Lamb.

  • The Supreme Being, if we can apply the term to him, is Ndengei, or Degei, 'who seems to be an impersonation of the abstract idea of eternal existence.

  • His old friend, Du Pont Grave, who seems to have been a martyr to the gout for some time past, resolved to return to France, and he little expected ever to see him again.

  • The painter above mentioned, and who suggests to us the name of a greater than he, would appear to have been Gentile da Fabriano, who seems to have been employed by the Pope at a regular yearly salary.

  • This "insect" is supposed to have just had its head badly crushed by St. Anne, who seems to be begging its pardon.

  • She was la princesse candide not only in looks but in conduct, and won the devoted love of her boy husband, who seems to have been himself of a lovable disposition.

  • Count Raymond of Toulouse, who seems to have been merely an easy-going man, inclined rather to religious liberty and freedom of conscience than to positive heresy, was assailed as a monster of vice.

  • Polycarp, who seems to have written about that time,[550:3] still uses the terminology employed by the apostles.

  • James surnamed the Just, who seems to have resided chiefly in Jerusalem, finished his career by martyrdom.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "who seems" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    more dangerous; pepper and; well seen; who lived; who looked; who might; who stood; who was; who were; whoever says; whole number; whole soul; whole week; wholly different; whom all things were; whom alone; whom died; whom shall; whom thus; whose life; whose like; whose memory; whose power; whose territory; whose word; whose work