Part, Question
1 1, 76 | instance, with hair instead of clothes, and hoofs instead ~of shoes;
2 1, 75 | instance, with hair instead of clothes, and hoofs instead ~of shoes;
3 1, 90 | can make himself arms and ~clothes, and other necessaries of
4 2, 94 | nature did not give him clothes, but art invented them.
5 2, 101 | refraining from certain kinds of clothes, e.g. (Lev. ~19:19): "Thou
6 2, 102 | they had to wash their ~clothes and their bodies with water (
7 2, 102 | dispositions of his body and his clothes. ~Therefore it was unfitting
8 2, 102 | animals also, and in man's clothes, ~dwelling-place, and vessels.
9 2, 102 | leprosy in a house or in clothes. ~For just as leprosy occurs
10 2, 102 | a house is built, or in ~clothes. Hence the Law called this
11 2, 102 | the mere washing of their clothes; nor ~did they need to be
12 2, 102 | animal; and from its skin ~clothes are made having a pungent
13 2, 102 | his ~body, and washed his clothes, because leprosy rots the
14 2, 102 | rots the hair, infects the ~clothes, and gives them an evil
15 2, 102 | his tears man washes his clothes, i.e. his ~works, and all
16 2, 105 | brought with them, even their clothes ~(Ex. 21:2, seqq.): and
17 2, 22 | always sinful, even when he ~clothes the naked, or does any like
18 2, 94 | have gnawed a hole in your ~clothes, to fear superstitiously
19 2, 111 | instance by ~wearing shabby clothes, or by doing something of
20 2, 111 | was unwilling to possess ~clothes that were either too costly
21 2, 116 | to have health, a ~wife, clothes, and so forth, as stated
22 2, 128 | such as wearing costly clothes, despising and ~wronging
23 2, 144 | satisfied with moderate clothes, according to 1 Tim. 6:8, "
24 2, 144 | being content with moderate ~clothes. Neither, therefore, is
25 2, 162 | Para. 1/1~OBJ 8: Further, clothes are necessary to man, like
26 2, 167 | apparel, but with ordinary clothes, so that nothing be lacking ~
27 2, 167 | always a sin to wear coarser clothes than other people. For,
28 2, 167 | for a woman to wear man's ~clothes, so is it unbecoming for
29 2, 167 | for a woman to wear man's clothes, ~or vice versa; especially
30 2, 167 | or through lack of other clothes, or for some similar motive.~
31 2, 185 | for them to wear coarser clothes than other ~persons?~Aquin.:
32 2, 185 | says: ~"Not only give your clothes to the poor, but sell what
33 2, 185 | hands instead of arms and clothes, with which she ~has provided
34 2, 185 | religious to wear coarser clothes than others?~Aquin.: SMT
35 2, 185 | religious to wear coarser clothes than ~others. For according
36 2, 185 | evil." Now coarseness of clothes has an appearance ~of evil;
37 2, 185 | religious should not wear coarse clothes.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[187] A[
38 2, 185 | apparel. Fine and coarse clothes are ~equally to be shunned,
39 2, 185 | coarse rather than fine clothes.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[187] A[
40 2, 185 | ought not to wear coarse clothes.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[187] A[
41 2, 185 | are wont to wear coarser clothes, just as on the ~other hand
42 2, 185 | and joy they wear finer clothes. Hence ~penitents make use
43 2, 185 | mind is ~uplifted by fine clothes, so is it humbled by lowly
44 2, 186 | manual labor, scantiness of clothes, or the like.~Aquin.: SMT
45 3, 25 | external things, such as his ~clothes, and such like. Now it is
46 3, 35 | wrapped up in swaddling clothes" the Child whom she had
47 3, 35 | midwife. 'With swaddling clothes,' says he, 'she wrapped
48 3, 36 | wrapped in humble swaddling clothes, suddenly a new star shines
49 3, 37 | was "wrapped in swaddling clothes and laid in a manger" [*
50 Suppl, 76| A[1]] or as a man to his clothes. Hence it was possible for
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