|    Part, Question1   2, 67 |         Further, just as it is an officious lie when one tells a lie
 2   2, 67 |           from death, so is it an officious lie when ~one tells a lie
 3   2, 67 |           towards another. Now an officious lie is ~considered not a
 4   2, 67 |        from death is not a purely officious lie, for it has an admixture
 5   2, 68 |      someone and hurts no man is ~officious, and this is not a mortal
 6   2, 108|         sufficiently divided into officious, jocose, and ~mischievous
 7   2, 108|        sufficiently divided into "officious," ~"jocose" and "mischievous"
 8   2, 108|         in order to make fun, an "officious" lie for some useful purpose, ~
 9   2, 108|       first of these is called an officious lie, the second a jocose
10   2, 108| usefulness, and then we have the "officious" lie, whereby it is intended ~
11   2, 108|           are comprised under the officious lie, ~wherein something
12   2, 108|        guilty." Therefore even an officious lie, such as ~was that of
13   2, 108|   grievous. Therefore jocose and ~officious lies are not mortal sins.~
14   2, 108|    pleasure is intended, or in an officious lie, ~where the good also
15   2, 108|           this cannot apply to an officious ~or jocose lie. Wherefore
16   2, 108|          jocose lie. Wherefore an officious or a jocose lie is not a
17   2, 110|        lie. But it is neither an ~officious nor a jocose lie. This is
18   2, 110|     evident that it is neither an officious nor a jocose lie, and ~consequently
19   2, 110|           gain seen to involve an officious lie: ~provided it be do
20   2, 111|          is more grievous than an officious or jocose lie. Now ~irony
21   2, 181|           have an office is to be officious," i.e. harmful "to no one,
22   3, 35 |          No midwife was there, no officious women interfered. She was
 
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