bold = Main text
Book, Chapter grey = Comment text
1 I, 21 | the Old Testament), 4376 five kings who previously reigned
2 I, 21 | and that to these, as to five princes, everything was
3 I, 40 | mystery of the ten virgins, five of whom were wise and five
4 I, 40 | five of whom were wise and five foolish. All I say now is,
5 I, 42 | Socrates, is said to have had five daughters skilled in dialectics
6 I, 48(4619)| Metella, the third of Sulla’s five wives, had previously been
7 I, 48(4622)| like Sulla, was married five times. Mucia, his third
8 II, 8 | 8. Through the five senses, as through open
9 II, 18 | foolish, and shows that the five who had no oil remained
10 II, 18 | outside, but that the other five who had gotten for themselves
11 II, 24 | sheep and goats, of the five wise and five foolish virgins,
12 II, 24 | goats, of the five wise and five foolish virgins, of Egyptians
13 II, 24 | sons-in-law. One city out of the five, 4872 Zoar, was saved, and
14 II, 26 | say that so-and-so lived five and seventy and a hundred
15 II, 26 | it does not follow that five and seventy are more than
16 II, 33 | two debtors who owed, one five hundred pence, the other
17 II, 33 | servants his goods, to one five talents, to another two,
18 II, 33 | gained ten pounds, another five, and they, each according
19 II, 33 | had made, received ten or five cities. But one who had
20 II, 33 | ability”? If the gain of five talents and ten talents
21 II, 33 | who gained the least, and five to him who gained the most?
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