No, appearance is an abstract noun. You can see the singer appear on the stage, your food appear on your plate, or flowers with a pretty appearance, but you are seeing the person or the things, not their appearance. Their appearance is something you know.
Appearance - the way that someone or something looks.Usage: Hey Tim, have you seen Chuck? His appearance is horrendous, he looks like he just got out of bed!
You should not judge a person with his appearance you should talk to the person and know something
"Appearance" is what something looks like; "Performance" is what it does. "This car has the appearance of a gazelle and the performance of a slug."
Manifestation is the appearance or seeming appearance of something. So a ghostly manifestation would be the appearance of ghostly figures.
That is the correct spelling of "appearance" (how something looks).
Appearance: Outward or visible aspect of a person or thing; the way something looks.
nkj
Something having the mere appearance of being true or real.
Appearance is the outward aspect of something, it could be deceptive if that thing seems contrary to its actuality. Reality is the actual essence of something ; its fact.
appearance's sakeIt's intended to mean something done for the purpose of appearance; another way of saying it is "the sake of appearance." So it becomes possessive, just like "For God's sake" or "For Pete's sake."The apostrophe is correct but the final s is optional. "Appearance' sake" is favoured by some authorities as the beginning 's' in 'sake' does for both words. I think it looks odd though.
The phrase "Don't judge a book by its cover" means not to form an opinion about something based solely on its appearance. It suggests that one should look beyond what is superficial and not make assumptions without getting to know the true nature of something or someone.