Part, Question
1 1, 1 | precise formality of being ~colored; and color is the formal
2 1, 1 | sight ~in that they are colored. Hence colored things are
3 1, 1 | they are colored. Hence colored things are the proper objects
4 1, 12 | round ~about by the many colored sacred veils." Therefore
5 1, 17 | it is accidental to ~the colored object to be a man.~Aquin.:
6 1, 45 | strictly speaking, the thing ~colored is what is seen.~Aquin.:
7 1, 51 | can both be shaped and ~colored as appears in the clouds.
8 1, 56 | the pupil of the eye were colored with some particular ~color,
9 1, 67 | not speak of the air as colored. Secondly, because light
10 1, 76 | a body with a surface is colored, we have the second ~manner
11 1, 77 | species. For since to be colored is accidental to an animal, ~
12 1, 77 | instance, to something ~colored, to be a musician or a grammarian,
13 1, 46 | strictly speaking, the thing ~colored is what is seen.~Aquin.:
14 1, 52 | can both be shaped and ~colored as appears in the clouds.
15 1, 57 | the pupil of the eye were colored with some particular ~color,
16 1, 68 | not speak of the air as colored. Secondly, because light
17 1, 75 | a body with a surface is colored, we have the second ~manner
18 1, 76 | species. For since to be colored is accidental to an animal, ~
19 1, 76 | instance, to something ~colored, to be a musician or a grammarian,
20 1, 77 | does not thereby become colored. Now, for the ~operation
21 1, 78 | is accidental to a thing colored to be ~man, or to be great
22 1, 81 | common notion of ~something colored, the visual power is not
23 1, 81 | white, and not as something colored, it would be distinct from
24 1, 83 | is made ~into something colored because of its being informed
25 1, 83 | as the object ~actually colored is compared to the pupil
26 1, 83 | pupil which is potentially colored. ~It may, however, be said,
27 1, 84 | that ~color is not in a colored body, or that it is separate
28 1, 84 | reference to the apple which is colored; or if we ~express in word
29 1, 86 | potentially, but what is actually colored. In like manner ~it is clear
30 1, 105 | to the ~perception of the colored object.~Aquin.: SMT FP Q[
31 2, 8 | whatsoever that are in any ~way colored. Now the aspect of good,
32 2, 10 | something not in all respects colored actually, but only ~so in
33 2, 10 | object which is not actually colored, and thus it would not see
34 2, 10 | Now ~just as the actually colored is the object of sight,
35 2, 22 | object visible, not by being colored, but by receiving an intention
36 2, 102 | signified by the violet colored skins: and who should ~also
37 2, 53 | and her ~girdle is many colored" and that "he who is incontinent
38 2, 97 | differ in the species ~"colored thing," if one be white
39 3, 16 | therefore "it began to be colored." And this because "to ~
40 3, 16 | that "therefore it was not colored ~hitherto." Now, to be simply
41 3, 16 | when I ~say: "A body as colored is visible," it follows
42 3, 16 | visible," it follows that the colored is ~visible. But as stated (
43 3, 54 | body; just as variously colored ~glass derives its splendor
44 Suppl, 79| receive the image of a ~colored body.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[82]
45 Suppl, 82| seen, because it will be a colored ~body. Therefore it will
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