Book
1 1| to war were discussed at length by that Lord, with (questions)
2 1| reason to talk to him at length, and to learn and understand
3 1| when one considers these at length and approaches them in the
4 1| not, I want to discuss at length ((if you will listen to
5 1| profession, as I shall discuss at length before I finish this discussion.
6 2| on the arm, two arms in length and one in width, which
7 2| sword of an arm and a half length, and a dagger on the right
8 2| which exceed two arms in length are useless in tight places;
9 2| Sarisse, a good ten arms in length, with which they opened
10 2| next to him because of the length of the staff, so he must
11 3| would come to occupy in length and width the same space
12 3| should cover the entire length of the ten companies arranged
13 3| lengths long and an arm length and a half is occupied by
14 3| occupies, uses up an arm’s length of the space that exists
15 4| rather wide and of short length, than of long length and
16 4| short length, than of long length and very narrow. For when
17 5| flank in a file along its length, and distant from each other
18 5| other by their width and not length, they would come to occupy,
19 6| of it, and be of the same length as the former, but distant
20 6| to north, and when I say length, that from west to east.
21 6| lengths in width and ten in length. And in the other fifteen
22 6| hundred long, measuring the length to include the space occupied
23 6| quarters. Dividing the said length in the middle, therefore,
24 6| corresponding in location and length to the Captain’s Way, and
25 6| up twelve arm lengths in length and thirty in width so that
26 6| fifteen arm lengths for length and thirty for width. And
27 6| increased according to the (length of) time they resided in
28 7| battlements were made a half arm length thin (wide), the places
29 7| discuss on this subject at length; whence you have been able
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