Which preposition to use with conjunctions

with Occurrences 494%

On the same unimpeachable authority I may fearlessly affirm a smashed frogsmashed on the proper saint's dayin conjunction with hair taken from a ram's forehead and a nail stolen from a piebald mare's shoe, to be a certain remedy for ague, worn in a little leather bag.

of Occurrences 145%

Occurrence is the conjunction of two or more offices, which fall on the same day.

in Occurrences 19%

This was not, however, the first occasion on which they had acted in conjunction in matters that were not altogether honourable.

as Occurrences 11%

That at creation there was implanted in the man and the woman an inclination and also a faculty of conjunction as into a one, and that this inclination and this faculty are still in man and woman, is evident from the book of creation, and at the same time from the Lord's words.

than Occurrences 10%

4.It may be remarked of the comparatives former and latter or hinder, upper and under or nether, inner and outer or utter, after and hither; as well as of the Latin superior and inferior, anterior and posterior, interior and exterior, prior and ulterior, senior and junior, major and minor; that they cannot, like other comparatives, be construed with the conjunction than.

by Occurrences 7%

With spiritual men (homines) there is conjugial conjunction by means of that love grounded in justice and judgement; in justice, because the mother had carried them in her womb, had brought them forth with pain, and afterwards with unwearied care suckles, nourishes, washes, dresses, and educates them, (and in judgement, because the father provides for their instruction in knowledge, intelligence, and wisdom).

into Occurrences 5%

Love, considered itself, is a desire and consequent tendency to conjunction; and conjugial love to conjunction into a one; for the male-man and the female-man were so created, that from two they may become as it were one man, or one flesh; and when they become a one, then, taken together they are a man (homo) in his fulness; but without such conjunction, they are two, and each is a divided or half-man.

between Occurrences 4%

Expressions are to be used which have a power of illustrating the oration; yet such as are not unusual, but weighty, full-sounding, sonorous, compound, well-invented, and well-applied, not vulgar; borrowed from other subjects, and often metaphorical, not consisting of single words, but dissolved into several clauses, which are uttered without any conjunction between them, so as to appear more numerous.

on Occurrences 3%

The secret of the Conjunction on which so many fine heads had split, on which so many learned definitions were thrown away, as if it was its peculiar province and inborn virtue to announce oracles and formal propositions, and nothing else, like a Doctor of Laws, is here at once accounted for, inasmuch as it is clearly nothing but another part of speech, the pronoun, that, with a third part of speech, the noun, thing, understood.

to Occurrences 3%

How she did it I don't know, but her feet remained in the gharry, while her head was in close conjunction to the horses' hoofs.

at Occurrences 3%

All favorable stars seem to have been in conjunction at his nativity.

after Occurrences 2%

Dr. Lowth's distribution is the same, except that he placed the adjective after the pronoun, the conjunction after the preposition, and, like Priestley, called the participle a verb, thus making the parts of speech nine.

like Occurrences 1%

"I suppose it is rather overwhelming," she said; "a conjunction like that.

from Occurrences 1%

"Prepositions, you recollect, connect words, and so do conjunctions: how, then, can you tell a conjunction from a preposition?"

for Occurrences 1%

Though from a maritime point of view, Tyre was perhaps the chief centre of conjunction for all the main streams of the world, from the point of view of literature and any other art, it was an admitted backwater.

before Occurrences 1%

4.In point of order, it is not amiss to treat conjunctions before prepositions; though this is not the method of Lowth, or of Murray.

among Occurrences 1%

4. He distributes the conjunctions among the other parts of speech; and so did Tooke.

without Occurrences 1%

This conjunction has a value of eight degrees, a value possible to all conjunctions without exception.

as Occurrences 1%

Of Adverbs to verbs, participles, &c., by Rule 21st; (7.) Of Conjunctions as connecting words, phrases, or sentences, by Rule 22nd; (8.)

Which preposition to use with  conjunctions