Part, Question
1 2, 69 | a hungry and thirsty man eats and drinks with ~eager appetite.
2 2, 72 | satiate his appetite, ~both eats too much and omits the prescribed
3 2, 146 | glutton exceeds in "what" he eats, or in ~"how much," "how"
4 2, 146 | much," "how" or "when he eats."~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[148]
5 2, 148 | In this way when a man eats or drinks much at the ~physician'
6 2, 185 | He who through idleness ~eats often at another's table,
7 3, 66 | is born once, whereas he eats many times, so is Baptism ~
8 3, 73 | Christ's body, before he ~eats that bread and drinks of
9 3, 79 | following commentary: "He eats and ~drinks unworthily who
10 3, 79 | irreverently; and such a one eats and drinks judgment, i.e. ~
11 3, 79 | with actual venial sin, ~eats spiritually indeed, in habit
12 3, 80 | that the irrational animal eats the body of Christ sacramentally; ~
13 3, 80 | as a sacrament. Hence it eats Christ's ~body "accidentally,"
14 3, 80 | says on this passage: "He eats and drinks unworthily who
15 3, 80 | 76], A[7]). ~But he who eats, receives not only the sacramental
16 3, 81 | hands,~The food Himself now eats."~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[81] A[
17 Suppl, 14| worthy of the ~bread he eats." Therefore he cannot merit
18 Suppl, 54| substance, than with him who eats. Since then ~no tie of consanguinity
19 Suppl, 54| semen and that ~which he eats, neither will there be any
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