Which preposition to use with mannerism
There was also a charm in the unsophisticated simplicity of Grace, that was particularly alluring to a man educated amidst the coldness and mannerism of the higher classes of England.
It is much, and justly, admired; but who does not feel more than a touch of mannerism in such a passage as this? MILLAMANT: "...
She was a very sensible woman, and during her work on the boat she had picked up a Northern accent and a number of little mannerisms from the Chicago and St. Louis excursionists, who made ten-day round trips from Dubuque to Florence, Alabama, and return.
The Lorenzetti alone soared high above the Sienese mannerism into a region of masculine imaginative art.
The circular font of S. Frediano, for example, carved with figures in high relief by a certain Robertus of the twelfth century, combines the Romanesque mannerism with the naïveté of mediaeval fancy.