Which preposition to use with infuses
It is true that any one watching your teaching would observe a new spirit infused into it, expressing and fulfilling the child's own wants and desires.
BYTHESEA infuses with sentiment even the blue wreaths of smoke that curl up from the distant ridge against which loom the concentrated lovers that he selects for his idyllic romances.
Let it stand to infuse for a month, when strain it off quite clear, and it will be fit for use.
They are taken internally, infused in water, wine, or in any other convenient liquor; or let to lie for some hours in vessels made of the white earth; or the white earth is taken itself dissolved in those liquors.
The way to be happy is to live according to nature, in obedience to that universal and unalterable law, with which every heart is originally impressed; which is not written on it by precept, but engraven by destiny, not instilled by education, but infused at our nativity.
Moreover, as it is our spirit which philosophizes and not God's spirit in us, so the faith through which man appropriates Christ's merit is a free action of the human spirit, the capacity for which is inborn, not infused from above; in it, God acts merely as an auxiliary or remote cause, by removing the obstacles which hinder the operation of the power of faith.
He infused by his example a quiet but noble courage into the soul of Anselm.
" Now, forasmuch as this love of God is a habit infused of God, as Thomas holds, l. 2. quaest.
He spread the table before him with dried fruits of several sorts; and produced a remnant of cold wine, which as the rigor of the season made very proper, he mulled with some warm spices, infused over the fire, and presented to his shivering guest.
Poe had what may be called a scientific mind, infused through and through with poetry.