Part, Question
1 1, 85 | night air is calmer, when silence reigns, hence bodily ~impressions
2 2, 47 | 4 Para. 1/1~Reply OBJ 4: Silence provokes the insulter to
3 2, 48 | if in judgment, commands silence." On the part of ~the impediment
4 2, 10 | error, so does an indiscreet silence ~leave those in error who
5 2, 60 | receiving, by ~participation, by silence, by not preventing, by not
6 2, 70 | He that putteth a fool to silence appeaseth anger." Therefore ~
7 2, 70 | Therefore one ought not by silence to ~submit to reviling words,
8 2, 70 | ought, if possible, to silence ~their detractors, lest
9 2, 70 | an act of revenge to keep silence with the ~intention of provoking
10 2, 71 | If a serpent bite in ~silence, he is nothing better that
11 2, 159 | fourth ~is "to maintain silence until one is asked"; the
12 2, 160 | humility is "to maintain silence until one is asked," to
13 2, 175 | 14:34): "Let women keep ~silence in the churches," and (1
14 2, 183 | for instance solitude, ~silence, and certain severe abstinences
15 2, 185 | that working ~with silence, they would eat their own
16 2, 186 | is rightly preferred to ~silence, responsibility to contemplation,
17 3, 21 | servant could have ~prayed in silence, if need be, but He wished
18 3, 30 | 34,35): "Let women keep silence in the churches . ~. . but
19 3, 35 | same time, too, He put to silence the vain boasting of men
20 3, 55 | 14:34: ~"Let women keep silence in the churches": and 1
21 3, 67 | him ~[Vulg.: 'but to be in silence']." Therefore a woman cannot
22 Suppl, 39| 14:34, "Let women keep silence in the ~churches."]~Aquin.:
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