Which preposition to use with g

for Occurrences 12%

[Note: See Appendix G for notes on this footnote.

in Occurrences 9%

Don Tiburcio understands cojera as referring to himself; there is a play upon the Spanish words cojera, lameness, and cogerá, a form of the verb coger, to seize or capturej and g in these two words having the same sound, that of the Englis

of Occurrences 7%

Company G of the National Guard and a gang of broad-cloth hoodlums disguised as "Elks" made up the main body of the marchers.

with Occurrences 5%

Capitaine de G with the 2nd Battalion of Chausseurs, under General Dubail, had been in the thick of the struggle, and he described to me the action on the slopes beneath us, and how, through his glasses, he had watched the enemy on the neighbouring hill forcing parties of French civilians to bury the German dead and dig German trenches, under the fire of their own people.

to Occurrences 5%

"V has the sound of flat f, and bears the same relation to it, as b does to p, d to t, hard g to k, and z to s. It has one uniform sound.

before Occurrences 4%

"G before e, i, and y, is soft; as in genius, ginger, Egypt."Ib., p.

by Occurrences 3%

Symphony no. 6 in G by Haydn.

from Occurrences 2%

It was not without much reasoning, and the evidence of a lady who had been in England long enough to know the impossibility of such a thing, that I would justify Lord G from this piece of complaisance to the Jacobins, and convince the worthy magistrate he had been imposed upon: yet this man is the Professor of Eloquence at a college, is the oracle of the Jacobin society; and may perhaps become a member of the Convention.

into Occurrences 1%

"It would be a useful improvement to change this c into s, and g into j;" as, piersable, manajable, &c. "Or they might assume i;" as, piercibe, managible, &c.Red Book, p. 170.

about Occurrences 1%

i g about the matter.

on Occurrences 1%

They lay h on the house, g on the girl, p on the pond, and later do the same with words.

alongside Occurrences 1%

This examination resulted in my putting hard G alongside of hard C. H, I, and J were examined with like resultnothing.

after Occurrences 1%

Hig, hi and hy, are perfectly identical, and nothing is more usual in A.S. than the omission of the final g after i; consequently, hig=hy, di=dig, therefore higdi=hydig.

Which preposition to use with  g