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be about

A2 neutral both
In simple words

To be the topic of something, or to be somewhere nearby.

Literal meaning: To be around (about) something — in or near a topic or place.

Meanings

1 A2 neutral

To have a particular topic, theme, or purpose; to concern something.

"The documentary is about climate change and its effects on coastal communities."

"It's not about how hard you hit. It's about how hard you can get hit and keep moving forward."

— Rocky Balboa (2006 film), dialogue spoken by Sylvester Stallone
2 A2 neutral

To be present in a place or area, moving around. (Chiefly British English)

"There were a few tourists about the square even in the early morning."

3 B1 idiomatic informal

To represent a core value, principle, or priority — what something fundamentally stands for. (Informal, evaluative)

"Running a good restaurant is about consistency, not just creativity."

Usage notes

'Be about' meaning 'to concern' is very common in everyday English (e.g., 'What's it about?'). The sense of physical presence ('be about the place') is chiefly British. Also used as a modal-like phrase: 'be about to' (on the verge of doing something) is a separate but highly common structure.

Commonly used with

life topic story place town theme

Forms

Base
be about
I/you/we/they
3rd person
is about
he/she/it
Past simple
was/were about
yesterday
Past participle
been about
have + pp
-ing form
being about
continuous

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