Which preposition to use with heed

to Occurrences 180%

" "Pearls likely?" hazarded the other, without much heed to the assurance.

of Occurrences 144%

Promise me you will take no further heed of this unhappy business.

for Occurrences 11%

Without heeding for a moment my anxious inquiries as to what was the matter, he kept right on, leaping the logs like a deer, looking neither to the right hand nor the left, but with his coat tail sticking out on a dead level behind, making a straight wake for home.

as Occurrences 7%

The prophecies were unhappily as little heeded as those of Cassandra.

In Occurrences 5%

And then about his shoulders broad he threw 65 An hairie hide of some wilde beast, whom hee In salvage forrest by adventure slew, And reft the spoyle his ornament to bee; Which, spredding all his backe with dreadfull vew, Made all that him so horrible did see 70 Thinke him Alcides with the lyons skin, When the Naeméan conquest he did win.

in Occurrences 5%

Like the saint of the convent, she, and she alone of her splendid court, divined that there was something to be heeded in the words of Columbus, and gave her womanly and royal encouragement, although too much engrossed with the conquest of Grenada and the cares of her kingdom to pay that immediate attention which Columbus entreated.

at Occurrences 5%

V. warn, caution; forewarn, prewarn^; admonish, premonish^; give notice, give warning, dehort^; menace &c (threaten) 909; put on one's guard; sound the alarm &c 669; croak. beware, ware; take warning, take heed at one's peril; keep watch and ward &c (care)

on Occurrences 3%

Thou art indeed a lovely flower, And I, just like the fleeting hour, Which few will heed on folly's brink, So rarely deigns the world to think.

to Occurrences 3%

And, truly, this doth be the way of Life, and a bitter thing and a sorrow to Joyous Love to think upon; yet I here to be set to the tellings of Truth, and to have heed to all that reason doth show to be.

unto Occurrences 3%

And surely I went a little blindly, in the first, and did go with no heed unto my way.

with Occurrences 2%

The peculiarities of the different literary genres are heeded with a severity such as has been practised before only in antiquity or perhaps by the French.

with Occurrences 2%

Which done, hee with his attendants returned home, to the no small admiration of all Christians, that heard of it, especially of the French and Venetian ambassadors, who neuer in the like case against the second person of the Turkish Empire durst haue attempted so bold an enterprise with hope of so friendly audience, and with so speedie redresse.

by Occurrences 2%

That aim all studies at this mark, and show you poor scholars as an example to take heed by.

than Occurrences 2%

Incurious glances greeted the newcomer: none paid him more heed than an indifferent nod.

at Occurrences 2%

In what province Resydes hee at this present? Thomas.

lest Occurrences 1%

They said further, "Take heed lest by the delights which we have mentioned, you understand the ultimated delights of that love: of these we never speak, but of our bosom delights, which always correspond with the state of the wisdom of our husbands."

unto Occurrences 1%

Tis such a deynty peece of purity Such a coy thinge that hee unto whose lott She shall hereafter fall may boast himself To bee a happy husband.

into Occurrences 1%

But howe the Devill Gott hee into our porch?

vnto Occurrences 1%

Many other circumstances also doe they performe, all which they say haue some certaine signification: howbeit, neither would I write them, nor giue any heed vnto them, because they are vaine and ridiculous.

inioineth Occurrences 1%

Neither yet dare they attempt to doe ought, but onely according to the pleasure of their emperor, and as hee inioineth them by lawe.

until Occurrences 1%

She was familiar enough with that, so familiar that she gave little heed to what lay behind the aspector had given little heed until to-night.

by Occurrences 1%

" "I am of this opinion," said Cheke in a prefatory letter to a book translated by a friend of his, "that our own tongue should be written clean and pure, unmixed and unmangled with the borrowing of other tongues, wherein if we take not heed by time, ever borrowing and never paying, she shall be fain to keep her house as bankrupt."

above Occurrences 1%

An antagonist of a complex bad system,a system, however, notwithstandingand such is Popery,should take heed above all things not to disperse himself.

about Occurrences 1%

"When I left Havre on Sept. 27," he said, "the Allies were fearful that they would not be able to penetrate to the German line through the mass of putrefying men and horses on the battlefields, which unfortunately the combatants seem not to heed about burying.

Which preposition to use with  heed