Which preposition to use with strike
I was very much struck with her writing-table, which looked most businesslike.
A fresh blow has been struck at Woman's Rights!
In Germany, the progressive revolt of labour against work is thus measured by competent authority: There were lost in strikes in 1917, 900,000 working days; in 1918, 4,900,000, and, in 1919, 46,600,000.
The peninsula of India was of a dark, and Arabia of a light, grayer green, and the sun's rays striking on the Atlantic, emitted an effulgence dazzling to the eyes.
Whether it hit any one I can't positively affirm, but I heard a dull heavy sound, a kind of chug, as if it had struck against something soft, and the scream of one of the belligerents was brought to a sudden stop, by a sort of hysterical jerk, as though there had been a sudden lack of wind to carry it on.
Then he struck for his domus et placens uxor at as rapid a rate as his little dumpy legs could carry him.
So, good-bye, Mr. W; success to your fishing, Mr. W,' and she struck into a gallop towards home.
If he delayed by ever so little, it was an agony; yet when he did pipe up, his feeble strain struck to my heart cold and paralysing like a dagger.
We have witnessed an extraordinary growth of universities, libraries, and higher schools,the widespread increase of commerce, the prosperity of business, the rise in the price of food, and the great coal-strike of 1902.
Then my chance came, for as he lunged I struck from the side with all my force on his jaw.
We hid our canoes, and struck across the country, and travelled about explorin' for six weeks, and when we got back to our shantyin' ground, we were tuckered out you may believe.
And a pang struck through Donnegan.
" Struck by his manifest sincerity, the gentleman introduced him next day to a friend who took a warm interest in the temperance cause.
On the one hand, the arts of life, like Minerva, who was struck out of the intellectual being of her father at a blow, have started full- grown into existence, as the legitimate inheritance of the colonists, while, on the other, every thing tends towards settling down into a medium, as regards quality, a consequence of the community-character of the institutions.
The exact tints of silver and gold were frequent and especially favoured, At each corner of every garden was a hollow silvery pillar, up which creepers with flowers of marvellous size and beauty, and foliage of hues almost as striking as those of the flowers, were conducted to form a perfect arch overhead, parting off the gardens from the walks.
Yet Demosthenes when moved by passion attains the sublimity of intensity and strikes like lightning.
There has been one serious strike among the engineers since I began to write, and a good many minor troubles.
On the cap of the cartridge was a mark where the hammer had struck without exploding the powder.
[Illustration: Construction of Modern Torpedo, Showing All Important Parts, Including Engine, Propellers, Steering Gear, etc.] sufficient to sink the modern armor-clad battleship unless it struck under exceptionally favorable circumstances.
Young Cumberland had risen to his feet and was swaying to and fro before them like a man struck between the eyes by some maddening blow.
There was nothing striking about our hotel life, although we found it pleasant, being a "parti carré."
He was struck off the list at Boodle's three years ago for card-sharpingthat thin-faced, fair-mustached man named Cadby.
The blow we shall strike within three days will shatter that crust in a hundred places.
[Footnote 66: The strikes during the present war.
"In December, 1859, while stepping out of doors, she slipped, by reason of her stiff joint, and fell, striking near the base of the spine, directly across the sharp edge of the stone step.