Which preposition to use with competition

with Occurrences 202%

The very fact that she stands in direct opposition to no State, that she may have competition with various peoples but not long-nurtured hatreds, gives Italy a relative security.

of Occurrences 155%

Whither shall we flee from civilization, to take off the harness and be free, for a season, from the restraints, the conventionalities of society, and rest from the hard struggles, the cares and toils, the strifes and competitions of life?

for Occurrences 91%

With a huge population and limited resources, with few colonies, owing to her late arrival in the competition for them, Germany looked on the never-ceasing desire of Russia for Constantinople as the ruin of her policy of expansion in the East.

in Occurrences 88%

By and by, when our shameful tarifffalsely called "protective"shall have been done away with, and our manufacturers shall produce superior articles at less cost of raw material, we shall begin to compete with European countries in all the markets of the world; and the competition in manufactures will become as keen as it is now beginning to be in agriculture.

between Occurrences 50%

The race for naval armaments into which these three countries entered not many months ago, and the competition between the two great Anglo-Saxon people, cannot be other than very damaging for civilization.

among Occurrences 34%

But with the sexual life came a conflict for sex pleasure, a competition among members of the same species for the same individual as their sex partners.

by Occurrences 15%

and adds, that 'it was esteemed an excellent competition by the metaphor-hunting mob of silly writings in Charles II's reign.'] * * * *

on Occurrences 15%

The cacti were grouped together on a table on one side of the hall and the prize winning exhibits of the flower arrangement competition on another.

as Occurrences 13%

The steady flow of cheap unskilled foreign labour into our large cities, especially into London, swollen by occasional floods of compulsory exiles, adds an element whose competition as a part of the mass of unskilled labour is injurious out of proportion to its numerical amount.

from Occurrences 9%

Under circumstances giving a powerful impulse to manufacturing industry it has made among us a progress and exhibited an efficiency which justify the belief that with a protection not more than is due to the enterprising citizens whose interests are now at stake it will become at an early day not only safe against occasional competitions from abroad, but a source of domestic wealth and even of external commerce.

to Occurrences 7%

The labour-unit being personal only surrenders part of his freedom of action and competition to the Union, which henceforth represents the social side of his industrial self.

at Occurrences 6%

In 1812 they produced a collection purporting to be "Rejected Addresses, presented for competition at the opening of Drury Lane Theatre."

against Occurrences 3%

One need only contrast the conditions where each workman had to bid in competition against all others, and each manufacturer, the same, to realize the advance made through group union and cooperation.

within Occurrences 2%

There is, however, a reaction on foot which tends to reconcile the breach between ethics and evolution, by reducing the part played by competition within reasonable bounds, and making it subservient to the survival, not of the most selfish, but of the most social individuals.

amongst Occurrences 2%

On the one side, social conceit and exclusiveness give way to the free spirit of competition amongst all classes; on the other side, angularities and prejudices are rubbed away."

out Occurrences 2%

For, even if we leave foreign competition out of account, and consider, as it were, labor throughout the world as a whole, the demand for labor is by no means inelastic.

under Occurrences 2%

It secures to all trading nations equal tariffs, but this does not imply by any means competition under equal conditions.

throughout Occurrences 1%

In 1870, however, sixteen years after Trevelyan's Report, Gladstone established open competition throughout the English Civil Service, by an Order in Council which was practically uncriticised and unopposed; and the parliamentary government of England in one of its most important functions did in fact reduce itself 'to a mere signing machine.'

into Occurrences 1%

In the face of the great competitions into which it must enter, our religion must be ready to give an intelligent account of itself.

towards Occurrences 1%

Germany has led the way from a system of individuals and voluntary associations in competition towards a new order of things, a completer synthesis.

after Occurrences 1%

He only received two checks in these competitions after 1840, and these he rectified and overcame in an interesting way.

below Occurrences 1%

The most they have anticipated is a temporary and, generally, incidental protection, which they maintain has the effect to reduce the price by domestic competition below that of the foreign article.

over Occurrences 1%

Competition over vast sections of country has been practically obliterated, and this has been done so quietly that few people are aware of the change.

Which preposition to use with  competition