Which preposition to use with paralysis
A moment's paralysis of astonishment, and the involuntary rush forward was arrested by Muckluck, who fastened herself on to the rescuer's parki-tail and refused to be detached.
As it was, the vices of society only became aggravated at an era of violence, and the sharpest remedies failed to stay the creeping paralysis by which it was assailed.
There was some paralysis on his will, that, when he met men on common terms, he spoke weakly, and from the point, like a flighty girl.
You are liable to be stricken with paralysis at any moment, if [once?] subject to the [least] excitement.
In 1830 occurred a stroke of paralysis from which he never fully recovered; though after a little time he was again at work, dictating with splendid patience and resolution.
The notes, signed by half a dozen names, described the complete paralysis below the waist, with a few other medical details.
Numerous cases of paralysis among tobacco-takers in France were traced to the lead in which the preparation was enveloped.
The action amounted not to 'an error of judgment' but its 'paralysis in the face of fancied danger.