Which preposition to use with piquant

to Occurrences 3%

The dialect of the West differs from that of the East in many of the non-essentials, yet, perhaps, enough of variance is observed to make it noticeable and altogether piquant to the wide-awake Yankee, who, in turn, balances the Western "reckoning" by his unique "kalkilations."

by Occurrences 3%

Small as a child, and fragile, with soft hair and flaming eyes, and always the pathetic, appealing plainness of a plain child, with her child's audacity and shyness, her sudden, absurd sallies and retreats, she had a charm made the more piquant by her assumption of austerity.

in Occurrences 3%

Lawrence and Annie did not say much, but there was something peculiarly piquant in the way in which Annie brought and poured out the tea she had made, and which, with the exception of the old lady's remarks, was the only warm part of the repast; and there was an element of buoyancy in the manner of Mr Croft, as he took his cup to drink the tea.

than Occurrences 3%

Her tongue was sharper than her needle, and her pickles were not more piquant than her sarcastic wit.

about Occurrences 1%

He had seen at once that she and Tristram were not on terms of passionate love, and there was something so piquant about flirting with a bride!

as Occurrences 1%

The vegetables, crisper, and of much more varied taste than the best Terrestrial salads, sometimes possessing a flavour as piquant as that of cinnamon or nutmeg, are gathered continuously from one end of the year to the other.

on Occurrences 1%

SAUCES SHOULD POSSESS A DECIDED CHARACTER; and whether sharp or sweet, savoury or plain, they should carry out their names in a distinct manner, although, of course, not so much flavoured as to make them too piquant on the one hand, or too mawkish on the other.

for Occurrences 1%

If what you say were well founded, nothing could be more piquant for me than the ironical tone in which you laud my principles.

Which preposition to use with  piquant