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Alphabetical    [«  »]
penal 1
penalty 2
penitent 1
people 35
peoples 1
perceive 4
perceptions 2
Frequency    [«  »]
36 own
36 same
35 now
35 people
35 some
35 whom
34 been
Marcus Minucius Felix
Octavius

IntraText - Concordances

people
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   Chapter                              grey = Comment text
1 2| the superstitious common people, and pressed a kiss on it 2 5| that, in the case of many people, you know not whether their 3 6| provinces, and cities, that each people has its national rites of 4 6| which when angry any other people would have despised; and 5 7| the dream of a man of the people. And an acknowledged witness 6 8| SKULKING AND LIGHT-SHUNNING PEOPLE OF THE CHRISTIANS, WHO REJECT 7 8| which requires expiation--a people skulking and shunning the 8 9| children, sisters, mothers, people of every sex and of every 9 10| desolate, whom no free people, no kingdoms, and not even 10 12| or not able to assist His people; and thus He is either weak 11 12| uncultivated, boorish, rustic people: they who have no capacity 12 16| illiterate, poor, unskilled people should dispute about heavenly 13 16| heaven, while our sort of people, though poor, have both 14 18| all men? I hear the common people, when they lift their hands 15 18| discourse of the common people, or is it the prayer of 16 19| there are many gods of the people, but that one God of Nature 17 19| other gods of the common people to be elements, he forcibly 18 20| antiquity of unskilled people ought not, however delighted 19 22| NATURE, THE MINDS OF YOUNG PEOPLE ARE CORRUPTED, AND THENCE 20 23| are gods made from dead people, since a god cannot die; 21 23| a god cannot die; nor of people that are born, since everything 22 23| therefore doubts that the common people pray to and publicly worship 23 24| many also pitiable! Naked people run about in the raw winter; 24 24| Who does not perceive that people of unsound mind, and of 25 24| the multitude of the mad people.~ 26 25| fierceness? For the first people were assembled together 27 25| to an asylum. Abandoned people, profligate, incestuous, 28 25| governor, might excel his people in guilt, he committed fratricide. 29 25| nations: for against their own people neither did the Thracian 30 27| many, even some of your own people, know all those things that 31 31| level of the lowest of the people, if we refuse your honours 32 31| we do not distinguish our people by some small bodily mark, 33 36| and the lover of His own people. But in adversity He looks 34 37| hand. And how many of our people have borne that not their 35 37| shudder at the madness of the people brawling among themselves?


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