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The phrase 'seems to be cold' is correct and usable in written English
It can be used to describe an impression of something being cold. For example, "The night air seems to be cold."
Exact(2)
It wasn't the prettiest of games, but we knew it might be like this up there, where it always seems to be cold and windy".
Even commercials are full of happy shoppers bopping around during snow storms, but no one even seems to be cold or have wet feet.
Similar(58)
This morning, Colette, Sylvia's co-psychic, seemed to be cold reading badly.
Delivering his conclusion of accidental death by drowning, assistant coroner Jeremy Chipperfield said: "Ellis reached the other side of the river and he seemed to be cold.
The economy was crawling, it always seemed to be cold, the city was a sort of badlands of shops up for lease, foreclosures, dirty awesome live music venues, old-man pubs, low-hanging skies.
Thus, 14.2% of all the genes in the AsCIUniGene set seem to be cold stress related.
Some children seemed to be cold after being rained on for some time and from the damp conditions, he added.
American Pastoral faces what seems to be the cold shoulder from bookers at leading indie cinemas.
10 P.M. (NBC LAWW & ORDER: SPECIAL VICTIMS UNIT -- Every series seems to be doing "cold cases" these days.
The reason seems to be that during cold periods there are extensive grasslands, but these revert to forest in warmer times.
And a weird type of weather has left snow on the ground but seems to be accompanied by cold temperatures only intermittently.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com