Which preposition to use with unkind
'I don't think I quite can.' 'Don't you think it would be rather unkind to her?' Neither of them had mentioned Miss Argles' name.
I did think it was unkind of her to call everyone's attention to me just then, for even strangers heard, and turned to throw a glance at me as they passed.
Johnson said complacently, 'It was kind in you to take it off;' and then after a short pause, added, 'and not unkind in him to put it on.' He said, 'How few of his friends' houses would a man choose to be at when he is sick.'
Often the refusal is withdrawn on the first symptom of grief or disappointment on the child's part; a thing which is fatal to all real control of a child, and almost as unkind as the first unnecessary denial,perhaps even more so, as it involves double and treble pains, in future instances, where there cannot and must not be any giving way to entreaties.
O, too unkind unto so kind a wife, Too virtueless to one so virtuous, And too unchaste unto so chaste a matron.
" "No one ever said anything unkind about you," he said.
very.... You elude me, you know, which is unkind with two so old acquaintances.
Wherefore Moses was so woe that he desired of our Lord to deliver him from this life, because he saw them so unkind against God.
There was a good deal of sniping, but Nature was more unkind than the enemy, who received more than he gave.
Herbert, I know, considers me romantic, and perhaps unkind towards his friend; but painful as such an idea is, I cannot act otherwise than I have done.