Which preposition to use with shadiest
Lord Bulkeley's house is very mean, but his garden garden is spacious, and shady with large trees and smaller interspersed.
Raphael's paintings in Rome are shady in comparison to those of the Dutch school.
It is a mite too shady for 'em where they are, but still they're doing pretty well, considering.
There's something shady about it, you can be certain.
The residents who find it inconvenient to go to the north during the summer, cross the lake to their country villas at Passe Christianne, a pretty enough little place, far cooler and more shady than the town, and where they get bathing, &
All was cool and shady beneath the bank.
This beautiful walk on the quay, long and shady like the avenue of a gentleman's park, is the daily resort, toward four o'clock, of all the foreigners who are crowded in the hotels or packed in the boarding-houses.
At first sight his only noticeable feature was his fine tail, which was about as airy and shady as a squirrel's, and was carried curling forward almost to his nose.