Part, Question
1 1, 5 | further, as the taking of bitter medicine; while the ~virtuous
2 1, 17 | unhealthy ~tongue sweet seems bitter to a sick person. But as
3 1, 19 | He ~who wills to take a bitter draught, in doing so wills
4 1, 48 | in relation to white, and bitter in relation to sweet. ~And
5 1, 48 | white and black, sweet and bitter, and the like contraries,
6 1, 75 | vitiated by a ~feverish and bitter humor, is insensible to
7 1, 75 | sweet, and ~everything seems bitter to it. Therefore, if the
8 1, 77 | power to taste to sweet and bitter.~Aquin.: SMT FP Q[77] A[
9 1, 49 | in relation to white, and bitter in relation to sweet. ~And
10 1, 49 | white and black, sweet and bitter, and the like contraries,
11 1, 74 | vitiated by a ~feverish and bitter humor, is insensible to
12 1, 74 | sweet, and ~everything seems bitter to it. Therefore, if the
13 1, 76 | power to taste to sweet and bitter.~Aquin.: SMT FP Q[77] A[
14 1, 77 | perceives the sweet and the bitter, accompanies ~touch in the
15 1, 77 | itself becomes sweet and bitter: but by reason of a quality ~
16 1, 84 | perceives that honey is bitter, this would be equally true; ~
17 1, 84 | judges a sweet thing to be bitter, through his ~tongue being
18 1, 110 | humor, tastes everything as bitter, and the like with the other
19 2, 11 | to something else, e.g. a bitter potion for the sake of health, ~
20 2, 20 | being subordinate; thus a bitter draught is good merely ~
21 2, 31 | fever, ~sweet things seem bitter, and vice versa - or from
22 2, 35 | 5) that ~"weeping is a bitter thing, and yet it sometimes
23 2, 35 | as the taste of something bitter, and the smell of something ~
24 2, 46 | some he calls {pikroi} ~[bitter], because they retain their
25 2, 79 | invalid when he ~prescribes a bitter medicine for him. Therefore
26 2, 87 | medical man ~prescribes bitter potions to his patients,
27 2, 102 | of incense ~which has a bitter taste. Consequently it seems
28 2, 36 | pleasant beginning, and a most bitter end."~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[38]
29 2, 43 | of wisdom is to make the bitter sweet, and labor a ~rest.~
30 2, 92 | father being afflicted with bitter grief, made ~to himself
31 2, 157 | have a disagreeable and ~bitter taste. Now it has been stated
32 2, 184 | him, knew to shed ~most bitter tears, and he who from the
33 3, 15 | which it ~is ordained, as bitter medicine is not of itself
34 3, 46 | water, changing it from bitter to sweet; ~at the touch
35 3, 46 | of the crucified is ~most bitter, because they are pierced
36 3, 74 | wheaten bread, as being more bitter, and because Christ used
37 3, 85 | mourning as for an only son, a bitter ~lamentation." Therefore
38 3, 89 | Blessed Peter by shedding most bitter tears did indeed ~repent
39 Suppl, 85| Church persecutions were so bitter, and the corruptions ~of
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