Like the distinguished gentleman above says,
you can use this structure with all of the 5 senses (sight, hearing, taste, smell, touch)
This structure means I guess, I suppose, I think based on something I see, hear, taste, etc.
"seems" is less specific. you can use it for all of these.
(subject) looks (adj.) - you can see the (subject) and guess it is (adj.)
(subject) sounds (adj.) - you can hear the (subject) and guess it is (adj.)
more common usage - you have heard people talking about the (subject)
(subject) tastes (adj.) you have tasted the "
(subject) smells (adj.) - you have smelled "
(subject) feels (adj.) - you have touched "
more common usage - your feelings, your sense about the (subject)
(subject) seems (to be)(adj.) - anything/everything you have seen, heard, felt, etc..
Examples
- He looks tired. -good- I see him and I guess he is tired.
- He looks married. -okay, but not so good- It is probably not the man himself who looks married, but other things, like the woman holding his hand, or the family van, etc.
- He seems (to be) married. -good-
- Grandma sounds tired. -good- if you hear her yawn.
- The restaurant sounds good. -good, very common usage- I've heard people talk about this restaurant, or news about it or even read about it so I think it's good.
- Paris sounds romantic. -good- everyone says so
- This restaurant smells good. -good- if you are outside and can smell the food.
- This restaurant tastes good. -wrong- the restaurant's food tastes good, not the restaurant itself.
- These crackers taste old. -good-
- These socks feel warm. -good- if you are touching them with your hand and think they will be warm on your feet.
- This car feels safe -good- I'm in it and it seems to be solid and work well.
- This place feels dangerous. -good- I'm in a dark alley and I feel scared.
You can use seem/seems for EVERYONE of the above examples.
Note: This structure is used to state a guess/assumption (like above) or
a plain observation
- These crackers taste old. I don't know that they are old but I think, I guess they are. or
- These crackers taste salty. = They ARE salty. Just an observation, a fact or my opinion.
- Those flowers look expensive. I don't know, but I guess they cost a lot. or
- Those flowers look beautiful. = They ARE beautiful. I'm just stating my opinion.
However, SEEM/SEEMS is always a guess/assumption so we wouldn't say
- Those flowers seem beautiful. -wrong- except for a rare situation, for example, you see a poor quality photo:
"I can't see them well in the photo, but those flowers seem beautiful." but still the meaning is I guess they are beautiful.
Hope this helps
:)