Which preposition to use with conventional
Nevertheless, there is much that is conventional in the first edition of 'An Evening Walk', published in 1793.
She will be as conventional as the rest of us when her frocks are longer.
The younger branches of Quakerdom seemed more conventional than their ancestors in general dress.
While leading men to pierce below the artificial and conventional to the natural man and natural life, as Rousseau did, Wordsworth still cherished the symbols, the traditions, and the great institutes of social order.
It is to be regretted that she did not write a book on England, which on the whole she admired, although it was a little too conventional for her.
I should not, therefore, apply the word barbaric, as I am using it, to the duels of German officers or even to the broadsword combats that are conventional among the German students.
How could she ever be conventional with Guy?
Possibly the effect of a summer of out-door, home merrymaking, under the least conventional of conditions, had been to make formal entertaining under a roof seem more than ordinarily fatiguing and pointless.
In them it arose from their having nothing conventional about them.