Part, Question
1 1, 92 | of the land a trace of ~a hostile army.~Aquin.: SMT FP Q[93]
2 1, 95 | unfitting that elements hostile to one another ~should be
3 1, 95 | one. But many animals are ~hostile to one another, as the sheep
4 1, 107| wrought; by the powers ~hostile powers are repulsed; and
5 1, 108| charge are subjected the hostile powers."~Aquin.: SMT FP
6 2, 29 | merely as an individual, is hostile to the ~animal - for instance,
7 2, 102| in the griffon which ~is hostile to horses and men, cruelty
8 2, 105| inhabitants of a captured hostile ~city were to be slain,
9 2, 105| twofold: peaceful, ~and hostile: and in directing both kinds
10 2, 105| their ~relations had been hostile, such as the Ammonites and
11 2, 105| Amalekites, who were yet ~more hostile to them, and had no fellowship
12 2, 105| like manner with regard to hostile relations with foreigners,
13 2, 105| observed with regard to hostile cities. ~For some of them
14 2, 25 | respect they are not akin but hostile to us, according to Micah ~
15 2, 32 | them the fact that they are hostile to us.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[
16 2, 48 | military" prudence, ~whereby hostile attacks are repelled.~Aquin.:
17 2, 130| of human praise, "is so hostile to a ~godly faith, if the
18 3, 71 | expel from them the devil's ~hostile power, which deceived man."
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