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Alphabetical    [«  »]
how 62
however 17
huge 2
human 44
humanity 3
humble 1
humbling 1
Frequency    [«  »]
47 world
46 make
45 also
44 human
43 well
42 first
42 put
Quintus Septimius Florens Tertullianus
The apology

IntraText - Concordances

human

   Chapter
1 I | Here alone the curiosity of human nature slumbers. They like 2 IV | has gone wrong, it is of human origin, I think; it has 3 V | allotted at the judgment of human beings. Unless gods give 4 V | he had something of the human in him, he soon put an end 5 V | with anything of divine and human wisdom in them, point out 6 VIII | take your place beside a human being dying before he has 7 IX | their games they lave with human blood. It is the blood of 8 IX | the womb, while as yet the human being derives blood from 9 IX | loaded with as yet undigested human viscera, are in great request. 10 IX | with savage lust, seize on human bodies, do less because 11 IX | they less the pollution of human blood on them because they 12 IX | proved by their appetite for human blood, as well as by their 13 X | man, he had undoubtedly a human origin; and having a human 14 X | human origin; and having a human origin, he was not the offspring 15 XI | denying that they had ever a human existence. But as you cannot 16 XV | fashion your deities dance on human blood, on the pollutions 17 XVII | utmost thought, though our human faculties conceive of Him. 18 XXI | are worshippers of a mere human being. But we are neither 19 XXI | whole world without either a human or a heavenly king, not 20 XXI | Enlightener and Trainer of the human race, God's own Son, was 21 XXI | fulfilled in the lowliness of a human lot; a second, which impends 22 XXII | of deceived and deluded human beings, that they may get 23 XXIII | is coming to judge every human soul which has existed from 24 XXIV | worship against it. Not even a human being would care to have 25 XXVI | under whose sovereignty the human race once existed without 26 XXVII | images and the deification of human names. Some, indeed, think 27 XXVIII| a greater reverence to a human sovereignty than you do 28 XXXIII| reminded that he is only human. A voice t at his back keeps 29 XXXVII| divine avenging itself by human fires, or shrinking from 30 XXXVII| to call us enemies of the human race, rather than of human 31 XXXVII| human race, rather than of human error. Nay, who would deliver 32 XL | with many thousands of human beings, having been swallowed 33 XL | themselves. The truth is, the human race has always deserved 34 XLI | the sources of trouble in human affairs; on you lies the 35 XLII | themselves from ordinary human life. We do not forget the 36 XLII | to give alms both to your human and your heavenly mendicants; 37 XLV | virtue you have got from mere human opinion; on human authority, 38 XLV | from mere human opinion; on human authority, too, its obligation 39 XLV | is the real authority of human laws, when it is in man' 40 XLVII | so to speak, a nobody in human things. Then the Stoics 41 XLVIII| the moving to and fro of human souls into different bodies, 42 XLVIII| passes away, then the whole human race shall be raised again, 43 L | legitimate, because it is human, for whose sake it is counted 44 L | sentences. As the divine and human are ever opposed to each


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