Which preposition to use with liveliest
Why, its New-Year's Eve is about as lively as a real town's Monday morning.
Lady Studley was vivacious and lively in the extreme.
" His tone was so serious that all remained silent as they took their seats, and during the many courses served the conversation was less lively than on former occasions when there had been no ceremony.
"Down stairs with him," sed they both, and down I went, pooty lively for an old man.
The day was before me, and the place was lively with birds.
One of the liveliest of the girls, who had taken on herself the direction of our sports, she kept to be my companion all the time I staid with her, and every day contrived some new amusement for us.
Most folks have horses, and they get about pretty lively on 'em, but I've always had to walk.
"Step lively, will you?" Spalding, not given to stepping lively at other men's commands, was slow in answering, and then spoke drawlingly: "Wanted, am I?
She stepped lively to the door and stamped her way outside.
Now, come on, let's be lively about this.
Lord Byron himself is represented to have said, that extraordinary pains were taken with her education: "Her conversation is lively without being frivolous; without being learned, she has read all the best authors of her own and the French language.
Mrs. Popham was grave, even gloomy from the waist up, but incredibly lively from the waist down, moving with the precision of machinery, while her partner, a bricklayer from Beulah Centre, engaged the attention of the entire company by his wonderful steps.
My brain wasn't working very lively after what I'd been through over there at the board meeting anyway
In March the poor, everywhere, began to be out of work, and recruiting to be lively among them too, because for thousands of them it was soldier's pay or no bread.
He made the house lively by his activity, his imperiousness, his scolding, and his good-nature.
"If there were only something the least bit more lively down theresay an Undertaker's." "A Sister's Love can lessen the most crushing gloom, MONTGOMERY.
Thou dost play at hide-and-seek; While the patient primrose sits 35 Like a beggar in the cold, Thou, a flower of wiser wits, Slip'st into thy sheltering hold; Liveliest of the vernal train When ye all are out again.
"I 'member, when he came home, says I, 'Father, you seem clean used up'; and I stirred 'round lively like, to get him his tea.
"Now, young gentlemen," resumed the chief water tender, "take your shovels and fill in lively under boilers B and D." Three or four times Heistand checked one or another of the midshipmen, to show him a more correct way of handling the shovel.