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Alphabetical [« »] hideous 1 hides 1 hiding 4 high 37 higher 2 highest 8 highlights 1 | Frequency [« »] 37 crime 37 didn 37 fortune 37 high 37 much 37 safe 37 theseus | Publius Ovidius Naso Poems from Exile Concordances high |
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1 T-I| if I’ll send you~to the high Palatine, to climb to Caesar’ 2 T-I| grew silent:~the Moon on high steered her midnight horses.~ 3 T-I| risen,~brightest in the high heavens, baleful star to 4 T-I| or if anyone’s climbed high through the liberal arts –~ 5 T-I| Apollonia and Anchialus’s high walls.~Then Mesembria’s 6 T-II| to whom you entrust the high auspices and the gods,~and 7 T-II| defeated enemy,~shine out high on his wreathed chariot –~ 8 T-II| the gods, as well as~the high heavens, hasn’t time to 9 T-III| him!~Then I was led up the high stairway’s even steps,~to 10 T-III| deathless spirit flies on high in the empty air,~and old 11 T-III| Elpenor who tumbled from the high roof~met his king again 12 T-III| Why because Icarus flew high, the other lower:~yet both 13 T-III| always fear what is too high,~and narrow the sails of 14 T-III| shallows.~A look-out on a high hill saw Aeetes ship far-off,~ 15 T-III| father did not realise, high on a rock,~she set the bloodless 16 T-III| northern gales is such~it razes high towers, and blows away the 17 T-IV| Caesars,~and perhaps the high Palatine is clothed with 18 T-IV| little.~‘He, who shines on high in Sidonian purple,~was 19 T-IV| victory chariot, Caesar, high above,~wearing purple for 20 T-IV| lightning:~nothing’s so high and reaches so far beyond 21 T-V| gazed at my shipwreck from a high hill,~and gave no hand to 22 ExI| pardon,~among them Bato, high chieftain of the war.~Why 23 ExI| pole,~that always stands high above the flowing waters,~ 24 ExIII| character that’s witness to your high nobility,~that Volesus, 25 ExIII| earth.~Your mind towers high above your birth itself,~ 26 ExIV| will don purple robes of high honour,~and leave nothing 27 ExIV| citizens, seated~on his high, conspicuously carved ivory 28 ExIV| touching the clouds~on its high ridge, was better defended 29 IBIS| violent Aeacides sent ~to the high pyre, aged men, and then 30 IBIS| wood. ~May you approach high places no more safely than 31 IBIS| hang in Tartarus ~from a high rock, or, as books tell, 32 IBIS| girl who threw herself from high cliffs,~who had spoken evil 33 Ind| guarded by Athena.~ ~Athos~A high promontory of the Macedonian 34 Ind| again and the perceived high rank of the recipient, who 35 Ind| Lebinthos Icarus flew too high, the wax melted, and he 36 Ind| there abundantly. Up to 80cm high it has deeply divided leaves 37 Ind| at Nemi who ‘married’ her high priest the ‘king of Rome’,