Which preposition to use with plucked

from Occurrences 96%

And, while I was lost in admiration of myself, just as the peacock is of his plumage, imagining that the delight which I took in my own appearance would surely be shared by all who saw me, a flower from my wreath fell on the ground near the curtain of my bed, I know not whereforeperhaps plucked from my head by a celestial hand by me unseen.

at Occurrences 68%

" He plucked at a gray-wool knot in the coverlet.

of Occurrences 26%

As you have scrunched against the shelf not to block the passage, but with your head thrown back to see the titles up above, you have noticed at the corner of your eyeunless it was one of your blinder moments when you were fixed wholly on the shelfa man in a slightly faded overcoat of mixed black and white, a man just past the nimbleness of youth, whose head is plucked of its full commodity of hair.

in Occurrences 17%

Such trophies of ferns and lace-like mosses were not to be plucked in every walk, and they dawdled on and on skirmishing, with delighted hardihood, against the pitfalls of bog that covered morass and pitch-black mud.

with Occurrences 13%

A few fine, silky-stemmed grasses are occasionally found interwoven with the mosses, but, with the exception of a thin layer lining the floor, their presence seems accidental, as they are of a species found growing with the mosses and are probably plucked with them.

for Occurrences 12%

The wing-quills of the latter, however, having been systematically plucked for hundreds of generations, are now dwarfed and useless.

out Occurrences 10%

John Wesley"the brand plucked out of the burning," as he termed himselfwhen a boy was remarkable for his piety.

off Occurrences 6%

No, for his gravitie is counterfeit, Pluck off his beard, and you will sweare it so.

to Occurrences 4%

I simply hadn't the pluck to in the night.'

as Occurrences 3%

Still I don't believe in any aristocracy without pluck as its backbone.

about Occurrences 2%

There is a heedless, reckless pluck about the Irish Terrier which is characteristic, and, coupled with the headlong dash, blind to all consequences, with which he rushes at his adversary, has earned for the breed the proud epithet of "The Dare-Devils."

on Occurrences 2%

The heroes of old, "When Bird and Beldham, Budd, and such as they, Lord Frederick, too, once England's chief and flower, Astonished all who came to see them play," those "scorners of the ground" and of pads and gloves doubtless displayed more pluck on their rough, bumpy grounds than is now called forth in facing the attack of Kortright, Mold, or Richardson.

by Occurrences 1%

ter be outdid in pluck by that little bit of sweetness.

FROM Occurrences 1%

KENNET, A BRAND PLUCKED FROM THE BURNING.

before Occurrences 1%

The leaves which succeed are not fit to be plucked before the third year's growth, at which period they are plentiful, and in their prime.

over Occurrences 1%

Of course, he is full of pluck over it, but I don't like the idea of such an accident here.

than Occurrences 1%

"I will say, however, that Jennie did meet with one experience, in which her rescuer showed possibly more pluck than Mr. Gordon to-day.

amid Occurrences 1%

Although Chaucer had written several poems which were admired in his day, and made translations from the French, among which was the "Roman de la Rose," the most popular poem of the Middle Ages,a poem which represented the difficulties attendant on the passion of love, under the emblem of a rose which had to be plucked amid thorns,yet his best works were written in the leisure of declining years.

against Occurrences 1%

Of course a fight ensued, in which the prince and his companions showed immense pluck against terrible odds, and in which, as one reads in the novels of the 'London Journal' or 'Family Herald,' the natural superiority of the well-born of course displayed itself to great advantage.

without Occurrences 1%

Then he reached a forest of betel-nut, where again the nuts could be plucked without the trouble of climbing, for the clusters grew at the height of a man's waist.

during Occurrences 1%

" The adder's-tongue, if plucked during the wane of the moon, was a cure for tumours, and there is a Swabian belief that one, "who on Friday of the full moon pulls up the amaranth by the root, and folding it in a white cloth, wears it against his naked breast, will be made bullet-proof."

Which preposition to use with  plucked