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1 I | in poor and contemptible language. For we have a treasure 2 IV | carefully distinguishes language, meaning, and things, on 3 IV | are none the worse for the language in which they are clothed, 4 IV | in spite of the ordinary language, were strong enough to reach 5 IV | thought and the beauty of the language won the souls of the hearers, 6 VIII | something similar may befall the language of the passages before us; 7 IX | mankind, and in Scripture language "written in the heart," 8 XIV | contained in the seemingly poor language. And if I may dare say so, 9 XIV | mind that the primitive language of the Jews, which the Prophets 10 XIV | nor be made known in the language and speech of men. This 11 XIV | grace and truth": for this language becomes John and such as 12 XVII(310) | that all the words of a language were formed by an agreement 13 XVII | and others in the Persian language of other spiritual beings, 14 XVII | the same charm in its own language, it is possible to effect 15 XVII | great question, when the language of Celsus invited us to 16 XVII | natural power in a given language, if they are translated 17 XVII | translated into another language they lose the effect which 18 XVII | or Roman, or some other language, we could not make him do 19 XVII | subject to a man who uses this language. But if one were to say,319 20 XVII | into Greek or some other language, we shall effect nothing; 21 XVII | result from the use of such language according with the professions 22 XVII | with the Scythian race and language, not because Pappaeus is 23 XVII | His name in the Scythian language, or the Egyptian, or the 24 XVII | or the Egyptian, or the language in which he has been brought 25 XVIII | do not use such shameless language), but other things which, 26 XXI | to say that the Apostle's language does not imply that the 27 XXII | the whole earth was of one language, and of one speech. And 28 XXII | people, and they have all one language; and this is what they begin 29 XXII | and there confound their language, that they may not understand 30 XXII | Lord did there confound the language of all the earth: and from 31 XXII | earth as using one Divine language, and, so long as they agree 32 XXII | in the use of that Divine language; and let us suppose that 33 XXII | who give them their own language, to various parts of the 34 XXII | preserved their original language because they have not moved 35 XXII | have kept to the eastern language; and let him understand 36 XXIII(583)| 3 In popular language mathematici was the exclusive