Quizzes & Puzzles4 mins ago
Is "They cannot seem to understand" proper English?
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I've typed the line "They cannot seem to understand the nature of the problem", it rolled off the tongue, but I'm analysing it and I don't see how it can make any sense. Shouldn't it be "It seems they cannot understand ..."
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.And yet I'm sure I've often heard it spoken just like that, in the Queen's English - on the television, lol. I live in Sweden and I'm Swedish so don't trust me too much:) But I know I've heard it often enough and as I was reading your question I sort of heard someone like Stephen Fry saying it in my head... and he should know! ;-) Might it not have something to do with the etymology of the word seem? One of the meanings of 'to seem' has been 'to conform', so could it originally have meant something like "they are unwilling to/incapable of conform(ing)?
'Seem' here surely means appear or give the appearance of. Now, anyone CAN 'give the appearance of' understanding something although they haven't a clue what is really going on! Consequently, the sentence in the question is not really correct and I don't see how it can make any sense either. They do not seem to understand...ie 'As I look at them, I see no signs of comprehension'... is OK.
as Quizmonster suggests, "can" really goes with "understand" (or "not understand", to be more accurate) rather than with "seem". I think this is a fairly common way of putting it, and I expect everyone would know what you meant, but technically it should probably be "It seems they cannot understand" or "They seem unable to understand".
I googled the phrase you suggested, SH, and here is the relevant part of the very first site listed..."I know the solution to my problem must be simple, but I cannot seem to get it right."
It's pretty clear to me that what the poster means is "...it seems I cannot get it right."
As my earlier answer showed and JNO suggested above, it's a question of which verb - seem or get - has to be attached to the idea of 'cannot'. Obviously, it's the 'getting' that cannot be achieved, not the 'seeming', so the sentences on the site and in the question are simply wrong...senseless, even.
I have no intention of checking the remaining 32,999,999 sites!
It's pretty clear to me that what the poster means is "...it seems I cannot get it right."
As my earlier answer showed and JNO suggested above, it's a question of which verb - seem or get - has to be attached to the idea of 'cannot'. Obviously, it's the 'getting' that cannot be achieved, not the 'seeming', so the sentences on the site and in the question are simply wrong...senseless, even.
I have no intention of checking the remaining 32,999,999 sites!
QM why I should I believe you unless you first go through those 32,999,999 search hits ;-) Seriously though if it seems like I'm arguing, I'm not - I'm just trying to understand how my misconception has formed. If asked to put it in a sentence to exemplify I would have made up something like "I've told them over and over again but they cannot seem to understand that the carrot cake wrapped in the ABBA serviette is off-limits!" They will not get it through their thick heads and it's possible that they don't even want to.
Again, could it be American?
Again, could it be American?
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