Which preposition to use with nice
I felt very strangean outsiderall the first months, but my husband's friends were very nice to me and after a certain time I was astonished to find how much politics interested me.
Very nice of him.
" "Miss Flora looked right nice in that pink waist to-nightnot?
I should like every thing to be nice for you.
" When he saw that I was in earnest he was as nice as possible, told me exactly what I wanted to know,that I need not say "Altesse royale" every time I spoke, merely occasionally, as they all like it,that I must speak in the third person, "Madame veut-elle," "Monseigneur veut-il me permettre," etc., also that I must always be at the door when a princess arrived and conduct her myself to her seat.
"How is it," she asked, after a little pause, "that there are more men in the lower classes whom one can call nice than among their betters?" Paul paused between two letters, hearing the question.
He was going to visit a lady that was nice about those things, and that's the reason he wore nankeen that day.
The berries in their natural state make a very pretty garnishing for dishes, and may even be used for the same purpose, preserved as above, and look exceedingly nice on sweet dishes.
I am very glad to have her with me: she is a dear little thing, and so nice with the children.
Putting your nose to the grindstone isn't nice at any time, but it's awful when the gal children turn.
Come home early, and bring me something nice from the city.
Your hair looks very nice without it.
And then to him or to her, it didn't matter which, "Good-bye, dear good Mr. Pitmanhasn't it been nice after so long?" II Julia floated even to her own sense swan-like awayshe left in her wake their fairly stupefied submission: it was as if she had, by an exquisite authority, now placed them, each for each, and they would have nothing to do but be happy together.
This sauce may be made very much nicer by using cream instead of milk; but the above recipe will be found quite good enough for ordinary purposes.
"Yet it is very nice out in the garden.
That there had been a marriage at Nice between Mr. Scarborough and the mother of Augustus was certain.
It must be so nice under the willows, lying flat on one's stomach, in the fine grass!
From Biarritz to Nice via Toulouse.
"It's nice weatherfor fishes, ain't it?" He picked out a bit of floating wood from the water, and showing it to the dog, flung it into the parlor.
And I wrapt the cloak about her, and set the scrip and the pouch very nice beneath her head; and afterward, I knelt over to kiss her, before that I came unto mine own slumber.
They wasn't nice like my white folks then neither.
Upon another occasion, their Father had endeavored to impress upon them the unseemliness of throwing their refuse pieces, bones, and fragments of food about on the table-cloth, pointing out to them the orderly manner of the whites at table, and the propriety of keeping everything neat and nice around them.