Which preposition to use with rudest

to Occurrences 94%

She was abominably rude to you this morning at breakfast and yet you were just as polite as ever.

in Occurrences 23%

All were ungrammatical, rude in versification, crabbed and obscure in thoughtthe rough-hewn blockings-out of poems rather than finished works of art, as it appeared to the scrupulous, decorous, elegant, and timorous Academician of a feebler age.

of Occurrences 17%

It was very rude of the young man to stare at you through an aquarium, as you say he did.

as Occurrences 8%

No one was so rude as your ascetic antecessor.

for Occurrences 8%

Though I suppose I am rude for fancying that you could demean yourself to such company.' 'I should not think it demeaning myself,' said Lancelot, smiling; '

at Occurrences 5%

Already they were beginning to be rude at the baker's.

of Occurrences 3%

He ringed his fire with rocks, lugging them as heavy as he could carry up from the creek side, making the rudest of fireplaces.

than Occurrences 3%

Nothing can be more rude than their labour- saving processes.

to Occurrences 2%

Probably the enmity between him and Caesar arose or was confirmed in this way, as Cato always made a point of being rudest to those whom he most disliked.

Out Occurrences 1%

I cannot tell In words the tenderness that glowed across His bosomburned it clean in will and thought; "Shall that sweet face be blown by laughter rude Out of the soul where it has deigned to come, But will not stay what maidens may not hear?" He almost wept for shame, that those two thoughts Should ever look each other in the face, Meeting in his house.

into Occurrences 1%

However stupid, bad or wicked a man may have been, if he is only rude into the bargain, he condones and legitimizes all his faults.

beside Occurrences 1%

Some of the maidens and children, however, kept aloof as if afraid, and indeed his voice seemed coarse and rude beside their softer notes.

until Occurrences 1%

Our soil is sterile, our modes of farming have been rude until within a few years; and under the circumstances,with the Yankee notion that the getting of money is the chief end of man,exclusive devotion to labor has been deemed indispensable to success.

with Occurrences 1%

The most I have seen was plundering the towns for provisions, drinking up their beer, and turning our horses into their fields, or stacks of corn; and sometimes the soldiers would be a little rude with the wenches; but alas!

against Occurrences 1%

In noise so rude against me? Ham.

after Occurrences 1%

"I hope you understand, Mr. Hilliard, and don't think I'm being rude after all your kindness," Angela said, melting a little; "I could hardly refuse them, when it was a question of chaperoning a newly engaged couple; and I thought you would join us, of course.

Which preposition to use with  rudest