Example sentences of "be about [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 It seemed to be about a young woman , thinking aloud as she went about her home doing her chores .
2 and I mean I 've got s it 's not as bad going back from here cos it 'll only be about a six hour then .
3 Now the more certain that we want to be about a particular inference , right , the smaller is the significance level .
4 Like a dutiful citizen , I checked in with the Usher and he looked at his clipboard and said there would be about a fifteen-minute wait , so why did n't I take a seat ?
5 You should dig a pit a yard deep ; for comfort while digging , this will need to be about a square yard in area .
6 ‘ Then you must be about the only person in London that has n't heard , ’ Bragg said drily .
7 ‘ I have n't even seen the original series — I must be about the only guy in the western hemisphere who has n't , ’ he said as the cast walked up the plank in Irvine , Ayrshire , to inspect the Vital Spark for the first time .
8 It used to be about the best bowling green in the in this part of the country .
9 It used to be about the best bowling green in the in this part of the country .
10 The resulting footage has to be about the best combat recreation ever put into a film can .
11 It was to be about the –wicked stepmother ’ in Snow White , something from her point of view , redress some of the balance .
12 Most ‘ American ’ restaurants offer barbecued chicken — this will be about the lowest-calorie possibility you will see among the hot choices .
13 The aims of higher education ( whether , for example , it should be about the disinterested pursuit of knowledge , or about training students for the graduate job market ) are confused .
14 ‘ My houses have to be about the right thing , ’ he told Endill .
15 It could n't be about the fire-damaged gin .
16 The development officers felt that 50 would be about the maximum number of new cases they could take on over a 12 month period .
17 And people do live in other parts of the area , and they need telephones — from what I 've seen of the place they 'll be about the main link with the outside world .
18 To my surprise and consternation I found the St Viger to be about the oldest hotel in Canada , probably First Class A-l in its time , but now somewhat run down , although the rooms were large and rather ornate .
19 ‘ This must be about the sixth glass of water you 've asked for . ’
20 Calcutta has to be about the worst place in the World to live .
21 I hope that my painting stands beyond the moment ; I want it to be about the human situation rather than a fleeting moment in time or a specific view ’ .
22 I hope that this debate will be about the valuable contribution that Britain can make to the European community , rather than a sterile argument about whether the king 's prerogatives will be taken over by the Government and given away in the face of the people .
23 Their only conceptual connection was that someone ( often a foreign observer ) had produced numbers about one phenomenon that could be correlated with numbers from other societies purporting to be about the same phenomenon .
24 His kids must be about the same age . ’
25 The natural litter of the foster mother should be about the same age as the animals to be fostered .
26 The second youth was said to be about the same age and was wearing a bright coloured top .
27 The set part of the sentence should be about the same length as the variable part which is used to finish it .
28 The issue may be about an undesirable friendship , being out late at night , buying a motor bike , drinking alcohol , and so on . .
29 An art monograph need not be about a person , but can be about an individual work or a scheme such as a mural decoration .
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