Which preposition to use with gibberish
He asked me for my story, and when he heard it looked curiously at Muckle John, who was now reciting gibberish in a corner.
" Without another word he was off, and as I committed the gibberish to memory I could hear his song going up the Saltmarket:
One of the prisoners of the band had said to me (I understand a little of the gibberish of these people) that if I left the little one to these women they would kill her because she was the daughter of a Touareg, whom the chief had preferred to them, and that they hated the petted, spoiled child, whom he had given rich clothes and jewels.
And why I could not get out the gibberish about the Bonaventure sooner, was because I matched my shin to break a stone, and lost the wager and my breath together.
Then Tug would call out some eloquent gibberish like "Seventy-'leven-three-teen," and that meant that on the first down the full-back was to come in on the run, and take the ball through the enemy's left-guard and tackle; on the second down the right half-back was to crisscross with the left half-back; and on the third down the right-guard was to scoot round the left-end.
Simper about the Mouth for NothingThe uncouth Gibberish with which all this was uttered like the Darkness of an Oracle, made us the more attentive to it.
He hurried me through the rooms, filling my ears with such gibberish as this:"That ere picture, sir, up there, was painted, five hundred years ago, for William the Conqueror, by Wandyke."
In this cry Cellini recognised the gibberish at the beginning of the seventh canto of Dante's "Inferno."
He whispered some unknown gibberish into their ears, and professed thus to tame them.