How to use in-sentence of “strange to”:
+ Ono’s songs and unique style sounded strange to most listeners.
+ It is strange to request its deletion.
+ It seems strange to me – this term Plebiscite is very unfamiliar to me.
+ Her celebration seemed strange to many people because women rarely took off their shirts during celebrations.
+ Jullien’s behaviour might seem strange to us today, but he lived at a time when the role of the conductor was becoming very important as orchestras had become much larger than they had been in the 18th century.
+ It seems a little strange to have the subcategories be for something a little different from the parent categories, but that’s how it seems to be set up.