Which preposition to use with biding
The silent of the women who bide at home surpasses the the warriors who engage in battle.
"When thee is rested we'll have a talk, lad," said his host, as they rose from the table; "but thee'd better bide with us for the summer and not fret about the future: thee dost need a holiday.
"We arrest 'ee on the charge of not biding in Casterbridge jail in a decent proper manner to be hung to-morrow morning.
"I wish thee would bide for good.
Bide on a bit longer, tak' heart once ogen, An' do give o'er lookin' so feaw; As we'n battled, an' struggled, an' suffered so long, It's no use o' givin' up neaw. FRETTIN'.
In the next book (73-77) Telemachus says to the swineherd: "Moreover my mother's feeling wavers, whether to bide beside me here and keep the house, and thus revere her husband's bed and heed the public voice, or finally to follow some chief of the Achaians who woos her in the hall with largest gifts.
I think he bides by England and is near.
"I am not so sure," Master Gerard mused, slowly, "that it might not be advantageous to bide near home.
It was like stepping over the edge of the universe into the eternal night that bides beyond the stars.
He bides below the town in a great house of stone, and entertains our Prince Miller's Son's archers.