The verb in "He or she seems selfish" is "seems." It is used to describe the appearance or impression that someone is selfish without confirming it as a fact.
The adverb for "selfish" is "selfishly."
The noun form for selfish is "selfishness."
She was criticized for her selfish behavior when she refused to share her food with others.
She was accused of being selfish for hoarding all the food during the crisis.
Sure! "She was accused of being selfish for always putting her needs before others."
"Seems" is a verb.
The verb in this sentence is "seems."
it is a linking verb. "Seems" "tastes" "smells" are all the same kind of verb, what one of my old teacher called "Wannabe Verbs", meaning they want to be a "Being Verb" (be, is, was, might be, etc. etc.) The soup seems good..... SEEMS is a Linking Verb to GOOD, which is the PREDICATE ADJECTIVE
No. Seems is a copula ('linking' verb).
No it is a linking verb
Yes, "seems" is a linking verb.
seems
The verb in the sentence is "seems." It is a linking verb that connects the subject "he" to the subject complement "tired."
I believe it is!
Seems
seems
The linking verb in that sentence is "seems".