Can we say 'sociable with sb'?

Hi,
Can we say ‘sociable with sb’? (I’ve never seen the adjective used with any preposition).

Many thanks,
Nessie.

Now you have:

  1. While most young male dogs go through a period of excessive sexual behaviour and can be a little too pushy for their own good with older males between the ages of about ten months and two years, they usually calm down and become more sociable with other dogs and less strife to have around the home.

  2. Robyn glanced at Melissa’s butter-wouldn’t-melt-in-m expression. “Melissa …” she hesitated and decided to go ahead “… was just pointing out that I hadn’t been invited to your birthday party.” “Were you?” Luke looked down at her and gave her a grim look. “Not very sociable of you, Melissa, was it?”

  3. Dolly was obviously set on being sociable for the whole evening.

I have been in many, but I’ve never found my fellow men very sociable on the night shift.

  1. But how you can expect people to become more sociable by just being, you know, shut behind closed walls, and and not having to actually, fend for themselves and cope with life outside prison walls.

  2. Although predatory by nature, they are not an aggressive species and will remain sociable towards any companions that will not fit into their mouths easily.