Which preposition to use with bouquets
There is no music except at five cents in the slot, and its tables for four are perpetually set each with a dish of sliced radishes, a bouquet of celery, and a mound of bread, half the stack rye.
"Let me pin this on you," said Dora to Dick, and fastened the small bouquet in his buttonhole.
He and Prudy were sitting in the doorway, arranging bouquets for the dinner-table.
At Turin our guns were wreathed in flowers and at Verona the station staff presented a bouquet to the General, on whose behalf Shield made a suitable reply in Italian.
She detached the bouquet from her belt and tendered it to him.
There was a fine bouquet on the table, and in addition a tiny one at each plate.
It was very well to say all this; but the truth must be told: when Richard had painted the lady's head and neck, he had no more room on the canvas; and what was done was so ugly, that the subject threw her bouquet at it.
The gem of the proceedings was a presentation of two lovely bouquets by the English ladies of Harbin.
"No, we are not poetical, like your people, but it is a pretty fancy," and Amy settled her bouquet with an absorbed expression, though inwardly wondering what he would do with his flowers.
The bridegroom accepted the bouquet without thanks, for thanks were not included in the traditional routine.
One evening as I sat in the cafe at my supper, a poor boy came in to sell flowers; for what we must pay in this country for a drink, I bought a bouquet almost as large as a bucket, and when the next lady came to collect for the music, I gave her the bouquet as a present to the whole company.
He even sniffed the bouquet before each sip; passed, that is, the glass under his nose and then drank.
our Rose!" With a big bouquet between her little hands Rose had stepped forward.
Petrik carried his bouquet over his shoulder.
Her face turned crimson; and leaning over to one side, she dropped the bouquet into the basket for cherry seed.
The linden tree, intermixed with various evergreens, form an interesting and beautiful bouquet around it.
For them it must have appeared to be the chance of a lifetime, and with their customary prodigality of ammunition they continued to pour bouquet after bouquet of high explosives or combined shrapnel and common shells into our works.