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only 202
onrush 1
onset 1
open 25
opened 7
opening 1
openly 9
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25 magistrates
25 maintained
25 old
25 open
25 orders
25 states
25 theirs
Niccolò Machiavelli
Discourses on the first Ten (Books) of Titus Livius

IntraText - Concordances

open

   Book,  Chapter
1 1, VI | the Venetians, or not to open the door to outsiders like 2 1, VIII | these [calumnies] than to open the way for accusations, 3 1, VIII | punished, they having places open to them to hear the accusations 4 1, XXXIII| time. And Princes ought to open their eyes to all these 5 1, XLVII | quickest possible way to open the eyes of the People, 6 1, LV | themselves of this by showing open indignation. This example, 7 2, III | love, by keeping the ways open and secure for foreigners 8 2, XVI | but maintained its order open [thin] and of a kind so 9 2, XVI | Triari was arranged even more open than the second, in order 10 2, XVI | they retreated into the open ranks of the Principi, and 11 2, XVI | they both retired into the open ranks of the Triari, and 12 2, XVII | becomes useless, as happens in open field engagements and battles 13 2, XIX | could have attacked, in an open plain, ten thousand cavalry 14 2, XXIX | battle, they made the ranks open and weak, so that neither 15 2, XXXII | was either by force or by open violence, or by force mixed 16 2, XXXII | force mixed with fraud: the open violence was either by assault 17 2, XXXII | of time and expense; in open assault it is doubtful and 18 3, II | is not sufficient to make open war on him, they ought with 19 3, VI | States through them, than by open war. For it is conceded 20 3, VI | a few to be able to make open war against a Prince, but 21 3, XII | which they could have left open. Whoever, therefore, desires 22 3, XII | but when they saw the way open, they thought more of flight 23 3, XXVIII| Republic ought, therefore, to open the ways (as has been said) 24 3, XLIV | time and seeing that an open indignation would arise 25 3, XLVIII| Rome, and finding the gates open and unguarded, remained


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