Book,  Par.

 1     I,     18|          the highest place, though sufficiently capable, who would aspire
 2    II,     44|        maintained that nothing was sufficiently impressive or suitable to
 3    II,     59|           expulsion of the Romans, sufficiently showed who could claim the
 4    II,     65|      Adultery, it was thought, was sufficiently guarded against by the Julian
 5   III,     17|          because they could not be sufficiently convinced that there had
 6   III,    100|            of the emperor Augustus sufficiently proved that a year's absence
 7    IV,      5| forthcoming, and even if they were sufficiently numerous, they had not the
 8    IV,     15|           No writer has been found sufficiently malignant to fix the guilt
 9    IV,     53|            it. They will more than sufficiently honour my memory by believing
10    IV,     73|           it was thought, had been sufficiently honoured by having a temple
11    IV,     94|            in his counsels. It was sufficiently clear that his arrogance
12    XI,     14|          two princes, which I have sufficiently discussed in my history
13   XIV,     65|           furnished as he was with sufficiently noble instructors in his
14    XV,      7|        Paetus, who would have been sufficiently honoured by ranking second
15   XVI,      2|            Nero upon this, without sufficiently examining the credibility
16   XVI,     15|            and that his wealth was sufficiently conspicuous to provoke cupidity,
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