Example sentences of "[am/are] [adv prt] [verb] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 We 're off to join the Provisional Government … in Botany Bay , eh ? ’ the voice behind him laughed dryly .
2 ‘ Ah , yes , of course , the live-in nanny to look after her while you 're out enjoying the high life . ’
3 And er , and they 've they 're out doing the Rocky Horror Show as well .
4 When actors say they want to be like Cary Grant , it 's usually a sign they 're about to make the worst movie of their career .
5 Suppose you 're about to make the last payment on your mortgage .
6 Off the field , Celtic are playing down weekend speculation that they 're about to announce the first instalment of finance for the Cambuslang stadium development .
7 We 're about to begin the long hike out to the rim .
8 And it wo n't just be the pilots who are out to make the best landings .
9 I am about to make the first incision .
10 All I remember thinking of as I pushed the trolley and looked at the red face and eyebrows was , My friend , you are about to take the longest journey a man ever takes in this life .
11 Thank You'-You are about to deflate the small plastic paddling pool in the garden in which no infant has paddled for a month until you realise that it is now full of strange vegetation and even stranger swimming insects and you decide to keep it as a nature reserve .
12 I must inform you that the same department are about to close the only respite centre ( Astley House in Huyton ) for children and young adults with special needs in the borough , so they can introduce what they call foster caring .
13 Welcome to these two newcomers but meanwhile , ‘ old hand ’ Diane Bennett tackles the decision of buying a computer for the knitting machine , so do n't miss Oh Brother if you are about to do the same .
14 On the manufacturing side , Sekers are about to trial the new ‘ Electronic Jacquard ’ — the latest from France , on a sale or return basis .
15 Gordon and I sit at a table as the old snowys sup their milk stouts and get ready to cross the road to the theatre , where several stars of television are about to perform the fabulous musical My Fair Lady .
16 In a moment we are about to leave the leisured and leisurely world of the eighteenth-century gentlemen and hurtle through the mechanical and material world of nineteenth-century England , where the revolutionary ideas of the aristocratic philosophers will become embodied in the social , political and economic structures of industrial Europe .
17 The idea is to produce a smooth zig-zag stitch with the sewing machine which does not catch the knitting in the machine foot , does not pucker , stops the cut edge from fraying and gives confidence to those who are about to cut the knitted fabric for the first time .
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