Which preposition to use with cutest
If he really does bump into a rock he cuts in an arithmetic book for his latitude and longitude and lets it go at that.
They are quite charming, built of red brick with white copings, with stiff old-fashioned gardens, and trees cut into all sorts of fantastic shapes.
The wood, which was all cut to the same length, and channelled out to admit the free passage of the air, was then duly placed in the stove, and set on fire; but the heat not passing very readily through all the sinuosities of the pipe, he ordered his head cook to screw on his exhauster.
IDA hauled away like a steam-engine, and Mr. P.'s prow (his nose, you know,) cut through the water like a knife, in a straight line for the shore.
It grew no bigger than a pea, and I looked, with my whole soul, to witness the final end of our Systemthat system which had borne the world through so many aeons, with its multitudinous sorrows and joys; and now Suddenly, something crossed my vision, cutting from sight all vestige of the spectacle I watched with such soul-interest.
Resolved finally: We is the original JACOBS, and if Bosting don't like the cut of our Jib, let her lump it.
Cut with a round cake-cutter and bake on a hot greased griddle until brown on both sides.
He and I had a great pow-wow, didn't we, Nicholas?" Nicholas smiled absently, and fixed his one eye on the bacon that Mac was cutting on the deal box into such delicate slices.
But it is a tedious cut out of a life of fifty-four, to lose twelve or thirteen weeks every year or two.
All at once, during one of these periods of life, a sudden flame cut across the nighta quick glare that lit up the dead earth, shortly; giving me a glimpse of its flat lonesomeness.
This was done by tying his feet together, then running a long pole, cut for the purpose, between them, and lifting each end upon the shoulder of a boatman, he was "strung up," as Allen expressed it, clear from the ground.
'So be it, Beda,' says he, and so I left him cutting at his belt.
'You wished,' said the man who had struck me,'I won't repeat the words: to me, for it was I only that heard them, the awful company that hurts most, that sets everything before us, both past and to come, and cuts like a sword and burns like fire.
It was nearly dark when they started to come back, and the latter proposed the short cut by Locker's Lane.
Before us on the hill-side across the stream was a wood, with its limits cut as clear on the meadow as a coppice in a nobleman's park.
In the evening, when the straight trunks cut against a blaze of gold and green, they sat by a smudge fire that kept off the mosquitoes and sang to an accompaniment of banjos and mandolins.
Presently the time came for me to leave the road and take the short-cut over the moors; but in the deluge, where the eyes could see no more than a yard or two into a grey wall of rain, I began to misdoubt my knowledge of the way.
He went further, and did the handsome thing by meas if it wasn't enough to cut under his price!
The horse was bruised and cut about the knees, but otherwise unhurt, so the men resumed their places; Babette climbed back to hers, and the heavy cart went jolting on.
Pare off the rind carefully, that none of the pine be wasted; and, in doing so, notch it in and out, as the edge cannot be smoothly cut without great waste.
A roast fowl is carved in the same manner as a boiled fowl, No. 1000; viz., by cutting along the line from.
I might run fiercely, not more hastily Upon my foe: I love thee well Amintor, My mouth is much too narrow for my heart; I joy to look upon those eyes of thine; Thou art my friend, but my disorder'd speech cuts off my love.
The Director of the Agricultural Department, Mr P.K. Desai, inaugurated it at 11 a.m (instead of a ribbon to be cut between the doors of the exhibition, there was a creeper).
Savoury Cheese Biscuits are made by cutting above paste, rolled very thin, into oblong or diamond shapes, with pastry cutter.
The extravagance of Shakespeare's Juliet, when she speaks of Romeo being cut after his death into stars, that all the world may be in love with night, is flame and ecstasy compared to the icy metaphysical glitter of Byron's amorous allusions.