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Alphabetical    [«  »]
prudent 4
ptolemaeus 2
ptolemy 7
public 31
publicly 8
published 1
publius 9
Frequency    [«  »]
31 near
31 orders
31 peril
31 public
31 ranks
31 secret
31 senators
Publius (Gaius) Cornelius Tacitus
History

IntraText - Concordances

public

   Book,  Par.
1 I, 1 | through men's ignorance of public affairs, which were now 2 I, 10| great qualities. In his public capacity he might be praised; 3 I, 19| nor did anything else in public in the following four days 4 I, 20| those who had caused the public poverty. Nero had squandered 5 I, 24| which we may almost call a public bounty, Otho followed up 6 I, 32| private animosities to the public ruin.~ ~ 7 I, 36| of the Roman people, or a public enemy, whom you have in 8 I, 42| compassion of one of the public slaves, who concealed him 9 I, 49| familiar names of great public disasters. "The world," 10 I, 52| that he had embezzled the public money, Galba directed that 11 I, 71| friendship to shelter them from public detestation, caring not 12 I, 84| fear. It was however in public that most alarm was felt; 13 I, 84| Vitellius they called a public enemy and a traitor to his 14 I, 89| his own motives, and the public honour now went for nothing. 15 II, 16| Otho, as being the heads of public enemies; but, lost among 16 II, 54| had the appearance of a public resolution. They did not 17 II, 55| were forthwith decreed. Public acknowledgments and thanks 18 II, 62| themselves by appearing in public entertainments, or in the 19 II, 80| the citizens to hold their public deliberations, and as they 20 II, 91| proclamation concerning the public religious ceremonial on 21 II, 98| supporting Vitellius in his public dispatches and edicts, Vespasian 22 IV, 4 | citizen, does he speak like a public man? In a few days' time 23 IV, 5 | to be able to enter upon public life with a spirit fortified 24 IV, 9 | should be restored at the public expense, and that Vespasian 25 IV, 14| he would encounter as a public enemy, were he openly to 26 IV, 39| was the sole subject of public interest, feared and believed 27 IV, 41| and to put a check on the public expenditure. The office 28 IV, 41| marked by an example of public justice was not barren of 29 IV, 42| denounced the perjury. This public censure, as it might be 30 IV, 50| not make his appearance in public, or trust himself to the 31 IV, 56| Agrippinensis; for the State in its public policy was strongly opposed


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