Part, Question
1 2, 10 | at least hold himself ~in check so as not to be led away
2 2, 31 | whereas there is no need to check spiritual ~pleasures. Therefore
3 2, 61 | reason is more ~able to check his daring in dangers of
4 2, 61 | cleansed, temperance has not to check worldly desires, for it
5 2, 61 | that "the social virtues check ~the passions," i.e. they
6 2, 74 | using his rational will to check individual inordinate ~movements,
7 2, 74 | or deliberately fails to check them.~Aquin.: SMT FS Q[74]
8 2, 74 | secondly, when it fails to check the ~unlawful movement of
9 2, 74 | deliberation it does not check the ~sinful act, this will
10 2, 89 | she refused to be held in check by the precept.~Aquin.:
11 2, 95 | audacity might be held in check, that innocence might ~be
12 2, 96 | audacity might be held in check." But it would not be ~held
13 2, 96 | it would not be ~held in check sufficiently, unless all
14 2, 3 | rest of the faithful, or to check the attacks of ~unbelievers:
15 2, 70 | 3) Whether one ought to check revilers?~(4) Of the origin
16 2, 116| so far as it is held ~in check by the rule taken from the
17 2, 121| tends by ~its very nature to check daring, but to increase
18 2, 134| than those which ~are a check on the things which lead
19 2, 134| too among those that are a check ~on things that withdraw
20 2, 134| virtue is the one ~which is a check on a greater obstacle to
21 2, 143| vices which it holds in ~check are the most deserving of
22 2, 156| although his reason is able to check each one, if it arise. ~
23 3, 14 | But this cause was held in check by original justice. Hence
24 3, 47 | holding His enemies in ~check, so that they would not
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