Which preposition to use with parting
This world never saw One quicker a troublesome suit to decide, When only one part of the case had been tried, (He could do it indeed and not hear either side).
Politics played such a part in social life.
So this is what he was thought to say, as far as could be made out: "I did hope, Hercules, bravest of all the gods, that you would take my part with the rest, and if I should need a voucher, I meant to name you who know me so well.
I seemed to have but just parted from my Love, upon its quiet surface, and it had gone, utterly.
Come, give me your Vows, or we must part for ever.
We slept unusually long; and, owing in part to Wigurd's good cheer, I awoke with a head-ache.
I don't suppose there's a part on the earth's surface more liable to seismic disturbances than this region.
One boy on his own account compared a shilling and an hour, and said that he could set out a shilling in five parts by the clock.
The survey was carried along the western shore, and while so engaged I determined the width of the upper wide part by triangulation at two points, the width of the narrow middle part at three points, and the width of the lower part, at three points.
"That," replied Martin, "is a gentleman known in these parts as the 'Pile-driver.'
Placid as a manse without, what was once a private and now a public house maintains through lowered lids its discreet white-frame exterior, shades drawn, and only slightly revealing the parting of lace curtains.
However wrong my conduct was I had been driven to it and my father, for whom I was sorry, by taking part against me, deserved to lose me.
" "Yes; they've got plenty of food, but" "They don't relish parting with it," suggested Potts.
Smarting under a slight he had received at parting from a school-companion, who had excused himself from a farewell meeting on the plea that he had to go shopping, he at one moment talks of his desolation, and says that, "leaving England without regret," he has thought of entering the Turkish service; in the next, especially in the stanzas to Hodgson, he runs off into a strain of boisterous buffoonery.
After the first two or three words, I didn't mind at all, and found myself discussing acoustics, the difficulty of playing any well-known part without costumes, scenery, etc., the inconvenience of having the public so near, quite easily.
Oh, the most tenderly of any part about one, Sir! Doct.
Colonel W-, is a great man in these parts Like most village nabobs, he's a corpulent gentleman with a great show of dignity, and in a white vest and gold-headed cane, looks eminently respectable.
Wash the parsnips, scrape them thoroughly, and, with the point of the knife, remove any black specks about them, and, should they be very large, cut the thick part into quarters.
For it was less his part than that of any other man alive to interfere when Rudolph Musgrave stood within a finger's reach of, at worst, his own prosperity and happiness.
He raised his hand in protest, but she went on: "So I should like to say one different thing to you, since we're to part after to-night.
so well and so seriously that the right unction seemed to be preserved, and prevailed over us; and after a supplication in German we parted under a very precious solemnity.
SPRAINS.A sprain is a stretching of the leaders or ligaments of a part through some violence, such as slipping, falling on the hands, pulling a limb, &c. &c.
Mrs. Wesley, without any pronounced hostility on her part toward the curate, felt a deep echo of the popular complaint in her own soul.
"You must be tired of me," she said at last, "if you are so ready to run the risk of parting out of mere curiosity.
I gazed at the chimney bricks and their substance seemed to part before my eyes.