Book,  Par.

 1     I,      3|       tended to centre. He was adopted as a son, as a colleague
 2     I,     15|       priests. He had not even adopted Tiberius as his successor
 3    II,     77|     opening the granaries, and adopted many practices pleasing
 4    II,     86|      which he had once for all adopted. On the death of Pandus,
 5   III,     39|        admirable elsewhere was adopted, and the Twelve Tables drawn
 6   III,     43|      historian, by whom he was adopted and whose name he took.
 7   III,     49|      Oppian laws were formerly adopted to meet the political necessities
 8   III,     80|       consulships, that he was adopted as a partner in trials already
 9    IV,     60|   banished from Rome, had been adopted as a citizen by the people
10    IV,     75|       he left Germanicus to be adopted by Tiberius and adopted
11    IV,     75|        adopted by Tiberius and adopted Tiberius himself. With this
12   XII,     29|      offspring of his own, had adopted Germanicus. Claudius also
13    XV,     22| control the sons whom they had adopted. An appeal was made to the
14    XV,     67|     From his wife, too, he had adopted a womanly and yet baser
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