Quotes about seems
seems sinatra wide
Sinatra has had a long and wide association with hoodlums and racketeers, which seems to be continuing. Frank Sinatra
seems
He's a man-child. Nothing seems to faze him. Don Cooper
seems whatever
I think there should be an expansion. Whatever seems to fit. Jim Boeheim
seems twin ugly vulnerable
Terrorism seems to be the ugly twin of democracy. We need to learn to live with it because we are vulnerable to it.
seems spark starting
That was the first time, other than the medley (relay) that we've put Libby (O'Brien) on anchor. Starting her just wasn't working. When Krissy (Brown) starts, that seems to spark her. We get more out of it all the way around with Krissy starting and Libby on anchor.
seems tires truck
I tell them it's the future. It seems to be where truck tires are heading.
seems team watching
I think just watching (tape of) the team we're going to play there seems to be more urgency, there's more awareness, more attitude.
seems shoot watching
I think just by watching him, like, 'Let's get on with it. Let's just shoot the scene, and we're done,' which seems logical. Robin Wright
seems touches work
(Johnston) has been hot. Anything he touches right now seems to work out for him.
seems
To be rather than to seem. Erin Morgenstern
seems
Nothing is as it seems; everything is as you allow it to be Chris Messina
seems
I only seem to date younger women. Ian McLagan
seems
Time doesn't seem to pass here: it just is. J. R. R. Tolkien
seems
I don't see us getting weaned off of this. It seems to me that's way, way down the road.
seems time
It seems to me that Halloween is the perfect time to get all over steampunk. Gail Carriger
seems
The dearest days in one's life are those that seem very far and very near at once. Abraham Cahan
seems turning
When we talk, it always seems like he's turning the corner, Tony Banks
seems
When ghetto living seems normal, you have no shame, no privacy. Malcolm X
seems
To say that we are mired in stalemate seems the only realistic, yet unsatisfactory, conclusion. Walter Cronkite