Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  28|       dull, doltish, fatuous, stupid, and senseless, who have
 2   I,  54|    were untrustworthy, false, stupid, and brutish to such a degree
 3  II,  19|  deficient in shrewdness, and stupid, and they are constrained
 4  II,  30|      great mistake, but shows stupid blindness, to curb innate
 5  II,  32|      brutish, as it were, and stupid, if we have yielded and
 6  II,  53|     But this, you say, we are stupid in believing. What is that
 7  II,  77|      As if some senseless and stupid fellow were to think that
 8 III,  20|  together; for the others are stupid, and can say nothing skilfully,
 9   V,   1|       brought on the stage as stupid and inconsiderate, being
10   V,  12| foolish, and utterly dull and stupid.
11 VII,   1|     adopt, although he may be stupid and very hard to convince.
12 VII,  48|    modern times, it is rather stupid to say that mortals of a
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