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 1   T-I|       crowded enough,~indeed, well known, though it wasnt ostentatious.~
 2   T-I|          injured me.~Yet my life’s known to you. You know their author’
 3  T-II|           a mischief, unwittingly, known to me?~Actaeon, unaware,
 4  T-II| displeasure,~but a god’s sometimes known to be appeased:~it’s known
 5  T-II|         known to be appeased:~it’s known for clouds to scatter, the
 6  T-II|             a weapon, ah, too well known to wretched me! ~Spare me,
 7  T-II|            and pleases,~and he was known when you were first called
 8 T-III|          brave heart, those you’ve known for a long time.~If only
 9 T-III|       always dear to me, but truly known~in hard times, after my
10 T-III|         names in a region scarcely known.~Further there’s nothing
11 T-III|         You, a new friend, not one known by long usage, in my pain, ~
12 T-III|         crowd~it was almost better known than you or I were:~and
13 T-III|        your dear friends –~is well known to the man you cultivate.~
14 T-III|           that ruined me.~If you’d known that too, my friend, you’
15 T-III|            petition the god you’ve known, in the proper way.~He can
16  T-IV|             I seek what is clearly known.~Why should my hope be mixed
17  T-IV|            sinned in nothing: your known virtues betray you,~and
18  T-IV|           sequence of ill luck was known to you.~Either fear or error
19  T-IV|           My ills were not so well known to me as they are now:~they
20  T-IV|      peoples,~my complaint will be known throughout the world.~What
21  T-IV|             was not slow to become known.~When I first read my youthful
22  T-IV|           Sea.~The cause, too well known to all, of my ruin,~is not
23   T-V|         What I owe to you would be known by the whole city:~if I’
24  ExII|        beloved wife.~So, when I’ve known this brief and unreal joy,~
25  ExII|            Tomis,~a place scarcely known to the neighbouring Getae,~
26  ExII|     territory had been well enough known to him.~He wouldnt delight
27   ExI|          badly.~Believe me, if I’m known to you as a truth-sayer,~(
28 ExIII|       Ulysses would have been less known if he’d wandered less:~Philoctetes’
29 ExIII|      fighting hard.~Your virtue is known and established for all
30 ExIII|       Maeotia,~no other was better known, by Euxine waters.~They
31 ExIII|           him, and no one’s better known~to me, my tongue was freed
32 ExIII|      leaders and the places~arent known to me. Nothing is to hand.~
33  ExIV|           I wish who you are to be known to everyone?~I’ll not utter
34  ExIV|       conscience that you, Brutus,~known to me in no uncertain manner,
35  ExIV|          be administered,~not also known to you yourself through
36  ExIV|            truly no altar’s better known to you than his.~It never
37  ExIV|        altar.~Nor is my piety less known to such strangers~as far-off
38  ExIV|      streams, and you, ~Thermodon, known to the Amazon war-bands,~
39  ExIV|             send you a song, you, ~known to me, barely a lad, when
40  ExIV|         how I am yours.~It will be known by every place beneath the
41  ExIV|       effort of many days:~Largus, known by the name of his own genius,~
42  IBIS|           that when you might have known the worst of ills,~you’ll
43  IBIS|         lest your flesh shall have known only this one manner ~of
44  IBIS|           Or like Achillesscion, known by a famous name, ~struck
45   Ind|  Germanicus in Germany, and a poet known for his epigrams (a fragment
46   Ind|          the Chalcidice peninsula, known in Thucydides’ time as Potidaea.
47   Ind|      teacher. He was a rhetorician known as ‘the Latin Siren’. He
48   Ind|        Book I.~Book EIV.VIII:49-90 Known of through the poets.~ ~
49   Ind|         electrum coinage (staters) known as ‘Cyzicenes’. It was held
50   Ind|            uninhabited site is now known as Bal-Kiz.~Book TI.X:1-
51   Ind|           the central point of the known world. It continued as a
52   Ind|            south of Tomis. Earlier known as Krounoi, ‘the springs’.
53   Ind|    disloyalty.~Book EIV.VIII:49-90 Known of through the poets.~Ibis:
54   Ind|          the River Eurotas, better known as Sparta. ~ ~Lachesis~See
55   Ind|        with Ovid in Sicily and was known to his third wife. ~Book
56   Ind|          military aspect he became known as Gradivus.~Book TII:253-
57   Ind|          Marsus, an Augustan poet, known for his epigrams. He wrote
58   Ind|          but many of his plays are known in adaptations by the Roman
59   Ind|           6-9AD. A talented orator known for his extreme flattery
60   Ind|            exile was only too well known, and was triggered by the
61   Ind|         the cause of his exile was known to all, as was hers (and
62   Ind|           s consulship of AD14 was known. Presumably we are in the
63   Ind|           Carus, of whom little is known.~Book TIII.V:1-56 This and
64   Ind|         period in exile in Sicily. Known as the ‘Tenth Muse.’ Her
65   Ind|       Their warrior princesses are known from Herodotus and from
66   Ind|            Rufus, an Augustan poet known for tragedy and epic.~Book
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