|    Part, Question1   2, 31  |     not an equal can reprove privately and respectfully. Hence
 2   2, 73  |    is a case of reviling, if privately, it amounts to ~backbiting
 3   2, 81  |      did not wish us to pray privately, that is for ourselves alone,
 4   2, 175 |      in two ways: in one way privately, ~to one or a few, in familiar
 5   2, 175 |   administer it by ~teaching privately but not publicly.~
 6   2, 183 |     Bonif.): "If we possess ~privately what is enough for us, other
 7   2, 185 |      works not ~publicly but privately as it were, ought not on
 8   2, 185 |     4, "Speech is addressed ~privately, preaching to many."~Aquin.:
 9   3, 21  |    offered individually and ~privately, lest when we prayed we
10   3, 29  |       minded to put her away privately, i.e. to postpone the wedding,"
11   3, 29  |   was minded to put her away privately." But although she had the
12   3, 55  | familiar instruction to some privately. ~And therefore as Ambrose
13   3, 67  |     to instruct and admonish privately; so she is not permitted
14   3, 80  |  knowledge of the crime ~can privately warn the secret sinner,
15   3, 82  |       can, however, say mass privately, unless the leprosy has
16 Suppl, 9 |     be made not publicly but privately, lest ~others be scandalized,
17 Suppl, 45| since one may baptize either privately or publicly. But the Church
18 Suppl, 62|    minded to put" Mary "away privately." Therefore it would ~seem
19 Suppl, 62|      seem that a husband may privately pronounce a divorce without
20 Suppl, 62|   previously admonishing him privately (Mt. ~18:15). Much less
 
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