Then she read his letters again, all of them, several times; and now, reading between the lines indeed, she was puzzled to notice a change which had escaped her. The later letters were as tender and as delightful as the first, but the tone was different. She was vaguely suspicious of their humour, she had the instinctive mistrust of her sex for that unaccountable quality, and she discerned in them now a flippancy which perplexed her.
(W.S. Maugham; The Fall of Edward Barnard)
Is it possible to substitute 'for' with 'in','of' or 'towards/toward'?
Thanks.
BNC has a fair number of prepositions after 'mistrust':
But I think 'for' fits best here - especially not 'of' (because it would make the two 'of's work two ways. In1 MISTRUST BETWEEN 7
2 MISTRUST ON 3
3 MISTRUST IN 3
4 MISTRUST BY 2
5 MISTRUST WITH 1
6 MISTRUST TOWARDS 1
7 MISTRUST THROUGH 1
8 MISTRUST FROM 1
9 MISTRUST FOR 1
10 MISTRUST BECAUSE OF 1
11 MISTRUST AT 1
12 MISTRUST ABOUT 1
'of' means 'typical/characteristic of [women]', but inCode:'the instinctive mistrust of her sex'
'of' refers to the object of the mistrust.Code:'mistrust...of that unaccountable quality' [
This substitution would result in a sort of Zeugma - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. (I don't think it exactly fits the Wikipedia definition, but it's the nearest word I can think of for this figure of speech.)
b
Thank you, BobK!
But what if I used the two 'of's' in that sentence - would it just sound 'awful' or 'foreign', or would the reader be forced to stop and think over that passage?
Thanks.
"For" in "for that unaccountable quality" means "because of" in this context, in my view.
Edit: Cf. Don Juan by Lord Byron: "Stolen kisses -- the sweeter for the theft."
Last edited by konungursvia; 06-Feb-2012 at 14:43.