Which preposition to use with soughing
A great sough of rising storm came from the northwest, carrying a hot, blinding mass of smoke and flame into the little retreat.
In its neighborhood not a sound could be heard except the twittering of the birds and the soughing of the old pine-trees.
He had the whine and sough in his voice that our sectaries prized, and I could shut my eyes and imagine I was back in the little kirk of Lesmahagow on a hot summer morn.
The wind soughed amid the headstones and railings of the gentry (for we must all die), and the black corbies in the steeple-holes cackled and crawed in a fearsome manner.
And now the whole forest moaned and soughed under the sweep of the wind.
The January wind came up with a sharp, dreary sough into the defiles of the hills, crusting over the snow-sweeps with a glaze of ice that glittered in the pearly sunlight, clear up the rugged peaks.
* "Noises?ou ay, there'll be noises,the wind in the trees, and the water soughing down the glen.
Nothing more natural than that a cold draught should have soughed from the pent interior of the temple, or that the air-liner, slowly turning as she hung above the Haram, should with her vast planes have for a moment thrown her shadow over the square.