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 1   T-I|       to be shorter,~to see the people of Tomis in their unknown
 2   T-I|      the groans and cries of my people rose,~and grieving hands
 3   T-I|        founded by the Haemonian people,~and Byzantium’s shores
 4  T-II|         So my poetry has earned people’s dislike,~as is right,
 5  T-II|        so many thousands of our people,~so much writing, I’m the
 6 T-III|      dress,~the language of the people, what I am and what I was,~
 7  T-IV|         who was always there on people’s lips!~How wretched to
 8  T-IV|    eternal virginity:~the loyal People, and the Senate with them,
 9  T-IV|         far as this.~So all the people will be able to watch the
10  T-IV| indifferent to their fate.~Some people will ask for histories,
11  T-IV|          wearing purple for the people, according to custom,~applauded
12  T-IV|   native country.~Yet the happy people will own the true spectacle,~
13  T-IV|        I set many above myself, people say~I’m not inferior, and
14   T-V|   quiver is exiled.~I’ve turned people’s thoughts now to public
15   T-V|       all the gods of the Roman people is assured,~O glory, O symbol
16   T-V|     interested to know what the people round Tomis~are like, and
17   T-V|        on this earth,~if at the people, they barely deserve the
18   T-V|      separate from them.~So the people pray: and as rivers run
19  ExII|      part, glorious Rome, these people neither care~about you,
20  ExII|        what I seek in it.~Or do people say truly that poets are
21  ExII|        utters prayers.~How many people this goddess has stopped
22  ExII|         we can believe what its people tell of themselves.~The
23  ExII|         the bold spirit~of that people, by a justified slaughter
24  ExII|       by me, Maximus, when most people~abandoned me, and he was
25   ExI|    world, succeed:~which is the people’s prayer and mine as well.~~
26 ExIII|    ashamed of my country):~it’s people worship a goddess, Diana,
27 ExIII|       It’s the practice of this people. What city do you come from?~
28 ExIII|         and our land,~while the people congratulate themselves,
29 ExIII|    complain of:~but the places, people in a thousand shapes and
30 ExIII|    great triumph,~and I suspect people have read them widely, for
31 ExIII|        those many.~When we as a people live under such a prince,
32  ExIV|         with the crowd,~and the people trampled due to lack of
33  ExIV|         I’ll not be one of your people,~allow my letter to take
34  ExIV|       pleasant to be jostled by people at a time like that.~I’d
35  ExIV|       dispensing justice to the people,~and fancy itself secretly
36  ExIV|      against your land, not its people,~are quite true: you too
37  ExIV|     wrong interpretation rouses people’s anger ~against me, accuses
38  ExIV|         to mention, whose songs people possess:~and youths whose
39  IBIS|         day brought ruin to our people.~As soon as he’d fallen
40  IBIS|         that plague affect your people, that Coroebus’s ~right
41   Ind|        to ‘bear the sins of the people’. (See Frazer: The Golden
42   Ind|        Strabo (9.3.3) says that people went to Anticyra to be purged.
43   Ind|  Laestrygonians. He incited his people, who were cannibals, to
44   Ind|      Book TV.II:45-79 The Roman people.~Book EI.II:53-100 The Roman
45   Ind|  Basternae~A Germanic or Celtic people living along the Danube
46   Ind|  Stheneboea.~ ~Bessi~A Thracian people living on the upper Hebrus.
47   Ind|     them.~ ~Bistonii~A Thracian people of the Aegean coast around
48   Ind|      Cimmerii~Book EIV.X:1-34 A people living between the Danube
49   Ind|       Cimmerian’. Also a fabled people who were said to live in
50   Ind|       originally applied to the people of Argos but later a general
51   Ind|        EII.VIII:37-76 A hostile people.~Book TIII.XIV:1-52 Book
52   Ind|       XIV:1-62 Ovid praises the people of Tomis but not the warlike
53   Ind|     Book EIV.X:1-34 A Sarmatian people who indulged in piracy.~ ~
54   Ind|            Minyae~The Minyae, a people named from their king Minyas
55   Ind|      the Aegean. ~ ~Mysians~The people of the country of Mysia
56   Ind|    stresses the savagery of the people whose Greek admixture is
57   Ind|         Ovid portrays the local people as barbaric savages who
58   Ind|    later!~ ~Paeligni~An Italian people whose capital, Sulmo, was
59   Ind|     Originally an ancient Greek people (Pelasgi) and their king
60   Ind|     Rutuli, Rutulians~An Italic people living on the coast of Latium
61   Ind|        Virgil’s Aeneid, and his people were later absorbed into
62   Ind|         A nomadic Indo-European people related to the Scythians,
63   Ind|    Scythia~Originally a nomadic people occupying the region between
64   Ind|      hence Thracian. A Thracian people, the Sithonians.~Book EIV.
65   Ind|        infernal deep.~ ~Tauri~A people of the Crimea, the Tauric
66   Ind|       100 The Tauric region and people mentioned.~Book EIII.II:
67   Ind|    destination is Tomis and its people, in their ‘unknown world’.~
68   Ind|    through his antipathy to its people and culture.~Book TV.X:1-
69   Ind|         Ovid portrays the local people as barbaric savages who
70   Ind|         Ibis:251-310 A troubled people.~ ~Turnus~King of the Rutuli
71   Ind|        that had belonged to the people of Tarentum. He decorated
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