Which preposition to use with fundamental
Yes, culture of the prime elements of life, of the very fundamentals of all fine manhood and fine womanhood, the fundamentals that underlie all fulness and without which no other culture worth the winning is even possible.
He thought of darting behind a cedar, but he knew the man behind him was an expert shot, and something fundamental in the brown man forbade his getting himself killed while running away.
That sin is an absolute, eternal, in some sense, irreparable evil is a conception altogether fundamental to that morality with which Christianity and modern civilization have identified themselves.
M. O. S. book five: A review of fundamentals for college freshmen SEE Ward, C. H. GROSS, PEGGY MOWERY.
It embodies much that has been learnt and thought out since this war began, and I think it is much truer and more fundamental than that mere raging against German "militarism," upon which our politicians and press still so largely subsist.
xxv.), which (in Mr Mill's language, pp. 488549), 'was so fundamental with Sir W. Hamilton, that it may be regarded as the central idea of his systemthe determining cause of most of his philosophical opinions.'
After such fundamentals as food and warmth, light, air and sleep, the first problems considered by this Biologist Educator are stages of growth, their appropriate activities, and the stimuli necessary to evoke them.
Characteristically, he now ignored the immaterial, went, as ever, straight to fundamentals without preface or delay.
Upon which Tindal observeth thus: "De majoribus omnes, was a fundamental amongst our ancestors long before they arrived in Great Britain, and matters of religion were ever reckoned among their majora."