She seems happy. Both can be used for the same meaning, but there is a subtle difference. "She looks happy" means that somebody visually appears (using your vision) to be happy. "She seems happy" can be more vague, it CAN be visual, but it is often just how you sense that person to be. If a girl is smiling and laughing -> "She looks happy." If a girl is not smiling, but maybe she is dancing ...
"She seems happy. " 和 "She looks happy. " 和有什么不一样? | HiNative
happiness Happy is the adjective happiness is the noun. |@aakritisingh649 happiness is a noun. Eg - She has something. She has happiness. see I changed something into happiness, therefore you can regard happiness as an abstract thing. Happy is an adjective, used to describe something. Eg - A white dog. A happy dog. see I changed white into happy, therefore proving that it is an adjective ( I ...
pleased, glad,Glad and happy are closer in meaning. But "I am happy" is also used to describe a general satisfaction with life, as the opposite of "I am depressed." "I am pleased" is usually a more temporary feeling, associated with something particular that caused that feeling| Happy and glad are pretty much the same, but pleased implies a qualification. Example: I am pleased with the results ...
Happy New Year!" Happy New Year" is the correct way. (正解!) "Years" is the plural form of "year" as in "many years". If you have heard "Happy New Years", it's either a misspelling or it could be interpreted as "year's" as in "Happy New Year's (Day) or Happy New Year's (Eve).|Happy new year is correct. We do not say Happy New Years!的同义词