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Alphabetical [« »] imperishable 2 impieties 1 impiety 12 impious 32 impiously 3 implacable 2 implacably 1 | Frequency [« »] 32 day 32 ears 32 hear 32 impious 32 seem 32 subject 32 victims | Arnobius Seven Books against the Heathen Concordances impious |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 2| are discovered to be more impious, but that they themselves 2 I, 29| charged before you with an impious religion? and because we 3 I, 62| been cut down and slain by impious robbers, would Apollo be 4 I, 65| 65. Oh ungrateful and impious age, prepared for its own 5 II, 45| But let this monstrous and impious fancy be put far from us, 6 II, 46| belief, so monstrous and impious, be put far from us, that. 7 II, 55| not to wander in a maze of impious and mad conjectures, we 8 III, 5| then, you are yourselves impious who serve a few gods, but 9 III, 7| refute, rebut his rash and impious words, and show that they 10 III, 15| this really degrading, most impious, and insulting, to attribute 11 III, 28| daily harassed? Call us impious as much as you please, contemners 12 IV, 6| more truth-disgraceful, impious, to introduce some pretended 13 IV, 27| to say either that we are impious, or that you are pious, 14 IV, 30| ourselves, that as you call us impious and irreligious, and, on 15 IV, 31| other course manifests an impious spirit, and a blindness 16 V, 22| women, it would indeed be impious, but the wrong done in slandering 17 V, 23| be found so imbued with impious ideas as to believe such 18 V, 29| have devised what is so impious, we do not call upon him 19 V, 30| speak of those as atheists, impious, sacrilegious, who either 20 V, 40| thought or believed more impious than that the rape of Proserpine 21 VI, 1| Having shown briefly how impious and infamous are the opinions 22 VI, 1| not as though we cherish impious and wicked dispositions, 23 VI, 21| robber was speaking with impious mockery, if the deity was 24 VI, 22| the offenders for their impious sacrilege. Neither. then. 25 VI, 22| youths, and punish their impious touch with terrible suffering? 26 VI, 24| the gods, put away their impious deeds, and, changing their 27 VI, 26| fears of the wicked and impious? Were the men of that age 28 VII, 30| language? Is not this, then, impious, and perfectly sacrilegious, 29 VII, 37| are we, on the one hand, impious, or you pious, since the 30 VII, 40| the nation, and from an impious band of conspirators; but 31 VII, 43| god who is so unjust, so impious, and who does not observe 32 VII, 48| in which men now live are impious and objectionable; that