Which preposition to use with marrieds

to Occurrences 924%

She was married to Ottley.

in Occurrences 14%

Young Dick was too impatient and too skeptical to wait until the end of the war, and, to the amazement of his aunts and the amusement of Acredale, he carried Rosa off, one day, and was secretly married in the rector's study at Warchester, so that his first son was born under the Stars and Bars in Richmond, while Dick was beleaguering the walls at Fort Walthall, four miles away.

for Occurrences 5%

Marcos and I are only married for fun, you know.

WITHOUT Occurrences 4%

* GETTING MARRIED WITHOUT A MASTER.

at Occurrences 4%

It could not be imagined, I said, but that his Lordship's setting out in a litter, and coming to town, as well as his taste for glare, and the joy he would take to see me married at last, and to her dear self, would give it as much the air of a public marriage as if the ceremony were performed at his own chapel, all the Ladies present.

than Occurrences 4%

No one was ever more married than theyat least than Mr. Deacon.

on Occurrences 3%

Had you married on your mother's last birth-day, as she would have had you, I should not, I dare say, have wanted a refuge; that would have saved me many mortifications, and much disgrace.

about Occurrences 2%

A young lady, who was married about that time, saw and wished to purchase an elegantly trimmed satin dress, and Henriette assented, thinking the value of it would be more sacred to her eyes, in her father's monument, than elsewhere.

as Occurrences 2%

People would then observe each other more closely; they would pay as much attention to the married as to the unmarried, no one being able to tell how things may turn out.

with Occurrences 2%

After the death of Henri IV (1611), she re-married with Charles de Lorraine, Duc de Guise, and died in 1656, at the age of seventy-one years.

of Occurrences 1%

"Why, Judy dear, after you are married of course you and Arnold can keep Lawrence with you.

off Occurrences 1%

In the second, which includes most of the modern Europeans and Americans, parents exercise care that their children shall make an advantageous marriagethat is a marriage which shall secure them wealth or comfort; but the frequency with which girls are married off to old, infirm, or unworthy men, shows how few parents as yet have a thought of their grandchildren.

myselfto Occurrences 1%

I am married myselfto a severe step-wife, who keeps me, not at bed and board, but at desk and board, and is jealous of my morning aberrations.

from Occurrences 1%

Do we cast the twice-married from the Church?

among Occurrences 1%

These jokes have married and inter-married among themselves and their children travel from press to press.

up Occurrences 1%

I can swear they were not married up to June '73.' 'You'll have to swear it,' said the doctor, 'and that with as little delay as possible.

against Occurrences 1%

Oppressed, as woman has always been under the reign of brute force; beaten, outraged, deserted, at best married against her will, she has too often gone for comfort and helpand those of the very darkest kindto the works of darkness; and there never were wantingthere are not wanting, even now, in remote parts of these isleswicked old women who would, by help of the old superstitions, do for her what she wished.

near Occurrences 1%

A young creature, brought up there, and well married near by, came in during our visit to show off her first baby to the matron and the children; as pretty a mother and babe as one could well see.

Which preposition to use with  marrieds