Which preposition to use with referred

to Occurrences 6090%

Evidently referring to something set forth in the missing and mutilated pages.

in Occurrences 109%

We have referred in a general manner to the conditions of Germany as a result of the Treaty of Versailles; even worse is the situation of the other conquered countries in so far that either they have not been treated with due regard, or they have lost so much territory that they have no possibility of reconstructing their national existence.

for Occurrences 42%

Reaching the boarding-house of Mrs. SMYTHE, as directed, Mr. TRACEY CLEWS soon learned from the lady that he could have a room next to the apartment of Mr. BUMSTEAD, to whom he was referred for further recommendation of the establishment.

as Occurrences 22%

We have before us three of his most popular books: Modern Science and Modern Thought (nineteenth thousand), Problems of the Future (thirteenth thousand), Human Origins (twelfth thousand), to which we shall refer as M.S., P.F., H.O., in this essay; taking the responsibility of all italics on ourselves, unless otherwise notified.

with Occurrences 15%

To these he prefixed some noble verses, dedicating the volumes to the Queen, and referring with as much delicacy as modesty to his place and his predecessor: "Victoria,since your royal grace To one of less desert allows This laurel, greener from the brows Of him that uttered nothing base.

at Occurrences 10%

"You are continually misled in this way unless you refer at every minute to your guide-book, and to go through Europe reading a guide-book which you can read at home seems to be a waste of time.

of Occurrences 8%

Not even the wretched method of the tenorI refer of course to the clerkand his miserably affected execution of the recitative passages, can mar the beauty of the words.

by Occurrences 4%

Each State in the Union has its own Governor, House of Representatives, Senate, and Judiciary, and is in every respect a sovereign Statethey like the word as much as they pretend to dislike the realityacting perfectly independently within its limits, except in such cases as were mutually agreed upon by the terms of the Union, and to some of which we shall refer by and by.

without Occurrences 3%

But for the statement of Origen that these words occurred in the 'Preaching of Peter' they might have been referred without much difficulty to Luke xxiv.

on Occurrences 3%

The laws, to which you refer on the sixty-eighth page of your book, tend to prove, and, so far as your admission of the necessity of them goes, do prove, that the relation of slaveholder and slave does not deserve a place, in the class of innocent and proper relations.

from Occurrences 1%

And after having been referred from one person to another, I at last found a man, first mate of a vessel in the docks, who knew Captain Chesters, and could tell me all about him.

before Occurrences 1%

Or, in other words, to what particular incident did the legend of initiation refer before the flood?

between Occurrences 1%

To the Senate and House of Representatives: I transmit a copy of a dispatch to the Secretary of State from Mr. Adams, United States minister at London, and of the correspondence to which it refers between that gentleman and Mr. Panizzi, the principal librarian of the British Museum, relative to certain valuable publications presented to the Library of Congress.

during Occurrences 1%

I had also taken to play on a somewhat high scale, and it was my reputation as a daring gambler that procured me the honor of an acquaintance with the signorina, the lady to whom the President had referred during his interview with me; and my acquaintance with the signorina was very rich in results.

among Occurrences 1%

Writing to him in 1809 Lamb says, referring among other loans to the volume of Dodsley with Vittoria Corombona ("The White Devil," by John Webster) in it:"While I think on it, Coleridge, I fetch'd away my books which you had at the Courier Office, and found all but a third volume of the old plays, containing the 'White Devil, 'Green's 'Tu Quoque,' and the 'Honest Whore,' perhaps the most valuable volume of them allthat I could not find.

tofrom Occurrences 1%

The result would be that very early in the process great superficial tensions would be produced, which could only be relieved by cracks or fissures, which would initiate at points of weaknessprobably at the craterlets already referred tofrom which they would radiate in several directions.

under Occurrences 1%

" To what poem Dorothy Wordsworth referred under the name of the "Inscription of the Pathway" has puzzled me much.

Which preposition to use with  referred