Which preposition to use with siding
Come tell me, blessed Claudius, why of all those you killed, both men and women, without a hearing, why you did not hear their side of the case first, before putting them to death?
He advanced too and we made a stately progress to the dining-room side by side.
Every possible luxury and every inducement to spend money, racing, gambling, pretty women of all nationalities and facile character, beautifully dressed and covered with jewels, side by side with the bearers of some of the proudest names in France.
I looked from side to side, and found that I could still see each piece of furniture; but in a strangely unreal way, more as though the ghost of each table and chair had taken the place of the solid article.
If all classes of men and women worked side by side in the Church, many great social differences would become adjusted.
When the mountain or cañon side on which, they lie dips at the required angle, and other conditions are at the same time favorable, they extend from above the timber line to the bottom of a cañon or lake basin, descending in fine, fluent lines like cascades, breaking here and there into a kind of spray on large boulders, or dividing and flowing around on either side of some projecting islet.
The cavern was too narrow; its sides at this point too steep, and the animals too thickly congested.
Mr. Canning answered he had felt a pain in his side for some days, and on endeavouring to lie on his side, the pain was so acute that he was unable to do so.
We had accomplished perhaps half the distance, when I heard again the sound of falling stones on the other sidethe side from which we had just come.
I never knew an out and out controversy between a man and his wife, in which the former did not get the worst of it in the end; and as to the impositions, which as a melancholy truth are too frequent, they are about as much on one side as the other.
We fairly tumbled up out of the dory, which we did not hoist on deck, but left at the end of the painter to beat her sides against the ship.
Their canoes are so light and artfully constructed that if overset they soon turn them right again by swimming; and they empty out the water by throwing them from side to side like a weaver's shuttle, and when half emptied they ladle out the rest with dried calabashes cut in two, which they carry for that purpose.
Below us lay a little plain, wedged in between two mountains, and breaking off on one side into a steep glen.
Suddenly they were all in a wild commotion, galloping from all sides toward their leader, and he, picking Martin up, was quickly on a horse, and off they went full speed, but not towards the plain where they were accustomed to go for their runs.
Such is woman that if she had felt and said at the altar that she couldn't bear the sight of him, it wouldn't have been in the power of masculine brutality and dissipated habits to drive her from his side through all their lives.
Dog Fish and Stingarees were hauled over the side without intermission.
In a deep gully at its foot, a stream went surgin' over rapids; the bank on the side towards the hill was, may be, twenty feet high, and a right up and down ledge.
The hind toes are three, like those of the fore leg; and the middle metatarsal bone is much less compressed from side to side than that of the horse.
Simson placed himself on the side next the ruins, so as to intercept any communication with the old house, which was what his mind was fixed upon.
Hour after hour we lay there side by side under one coat, waiting to be saved or die, for the wind grew strong and we grew weak.
In the New England village, on the other hand, the finer and the poorer houses stand side by side along the road.
Broil it on both sides over a clear fire, and serve with caper sauce.
For what seemed a long time he sat thus, motionless and almost without signs of life, while the two stood side by side before him.
During Friday, the 18th, artillery fire was kept up intermittently by both sides during daylight.
Standing on a hill-side near our river, I saw, thirty or forty rods off, a stripe of purple half a dozen rods long, under the edge of a wood, where the ground sloped toward a meadow.