Verbal constructions with "with" more common in AE than in BE

Is it correct, and safe to say, that -- generally speaking -- verbal constructions with "with' are to a certain extent more widely and commonly used in AE than in BE and other varieties of English ?

E. g.

Speak/talk with (as opposed to the shared speak/talk to);

visit with (=chat/converse with);

meet (up) with (originally chiefly AE);

get back with someone (as opposed to the shared "get back to");

stick with (as opposed to the shared "stick to");

check back with (as opposed to "check back to");

compare with (as opposed to the shared "compare to");

correspond with something (as opposed to the shared "correspond to");

interview with someone (as opposed to the shared "interview someone");

consult with someone (as opposed to the shared "consult someone");

conform with (as opposed to the shared "conform to");(...)


OP's proposition seems unlikely (at least in the general sense). Looking at the specific examples...

1: In both AmE and BrE, speak/talk with tends to imply a conversation between equals, whereas using to often implies a superior telling a subordinate something*.

2: Corpus-charts for meet [with] someone in Google Ngrams show that "with" occurs slightly more often in AmE than BrE, but in both cases the form without a preposition is far more common. This obsevation is even more true with visit [with] someone (where "with" is virtually non-existent).

3: You might reasonably get back with your girlfriend if you'd previously broken up with her, but practically no-one says "I'll get back with you" when they mean "I'll contact you later about this". Much the same applies to "I'll check back with you" (no-one says "I'll check back to you").

4: Google Books offers some support for OP in that over the past couple of decades, AmE has taken up sticking with the plan slightly faster than BrE - but again, we all use sticking to the plan far more often. Most likely if "with" continues to rise, Brits will adopt it much the same as Americans. As usual, we'll just be a bit slower on the uptake.