Which preposition to use with robust
Salo had not recovered as quickly as she had hoped, and Leonore, instead of getting more robust in our vigorous mountain-air, only became thinner and frailer.
Man is more robust than woman, but he is not longer lived; which exactly explains my view of the nature of their attachment.
Wesley was still subject to dizziness if exposed to the sun, but Jack and Vincent were robust as lumbermen.
No; he had the vision of the future; he was robust with feeling for others.
He wrote not for the fastidious, the over-refined, the morbidly delicate; for these find in his genius something too robust for their likingsomething by which their sensibilities are too rudely shaken; but he wrote for mankind at largefor men and women in the ordinary healthful state of feelingand in their admiration he found his reward.
Even in that tropical country he presented a strong contrast to the sallow, bilious officials with whom he was surrounded, and in due time returned to England in perfect health, one of the most robust of men, capable of indefinite work, which never seemed to weary him.
Corinne was tall, robust like a Greek statue, and transcendently beautiful.
Simply this, that a constitution robust by nature has been preserved in its strength by regular habits and out-door exercise.