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 1     Pre(3)  |        left-handed, and often on two at once. See Colman's preface
 2 Miltiad     |          it, to whom he assigned two hundred thousand infantry
 3 Themist     |       for his fleet consisted of two hundred ships of war, on
 4 Themist     |   hundred ships of war, on which two thousand transport vessels
 5 Themist     |          hundred ships, of which two hundred belonged to the
 6 Themist     |          the Athenians, by their two victories at Marathon and
 7 Themist     |         meats for his table."37 ~Two memorials of Themistocles
 8  Pausan     |        sagacity), at the head of two hundred thousand infantry,
 9   Cimon     |        took at Mycale a fleet of two hundred ships belonging
10   Cimon     |    settled a peace between those two most powerful states. ~Being
11   Cimon     |          Cyprus, with a fleet of two hundred ships, he fell sick,
12   Cimon(54) |   Hospitium, might exist between two states, or between a state
13   Cimon(54) |   individual, as well as between two individuals. ~
14   Alcib     |      himself was chosen general. Two colleagues were besides
15   Alcib     |           in which they had lost two hundred triremes, that had
16   Alcib     |        and he had requested that two colleagues, Thrasybulus
17   Alcib     |          after; and Timaeus; the two latter, though much addicted
18 Thrasib     |       him by the people, made of two sprigs of olive, which,
19    Dion     |    family; is connected with the two Dionysii, I.----Brings Plato
20    Dion     |         s sister, by whom he had two sons, Hipparinus and Nysaeus,
21    Dion     | Hipparinus and Nysaeus, and also two daughters named Sophrosyne
22    Dion(92) |                Dionysius married two wives in the same day, Doris,
23    Dion     |         the greatest courage, in two transport vessels, to attack
24  Iphicr     |          Philip, fled with these two boys, after the death of
25  Timoth     |     management of the war. These two persons, his father and
26  Timoth     |     great storm arose, which the two veteran commanders, thinking
27   Datam     |       the barbarians, except the two Carthaginians, Hamilcar
28   Datam     |        Aspendians and Pisidians, two thousand Cilicians, as many
29  Epamin     |    points, and had come to those two grounds of reproach, said
30  Epamin     |          Lacedaemonians, and had two joined in command with him,
31  Epamin(159)|          mentions, however, only two occasions; and no more are
32   Pelop     |        indeed, the second of the two great personages at Thebes,
33  Agesil     |          they should always have two kings, in name rather than
34  Agesil     |        rather than power, of the two families of Procles and
35  Agesil     |        of the other; each of the two, therefore, maintained its
36  Agesil     |         King Nectanabis 184 with two hundred and twenty talents,
37   Eumen     |          he commanded one of the two divisions of the cavalry
38   Eumen(194)|       destruction" of one of the two contending parties. ~
39   Eumen     |        till life left one of the two. Eumenes received some wounds
40   Eumen     |      must be adopted. There were two ways by which he might march
41   Eumen     |       his life or not. Meanwhile two classes of people crowded
42 Phocion     |         at that period in Athens two parties, one of which espoused
43   Kings     |      same nation; Xerxes and the two Artaxerxes, Macrochir and
44   Kings     |    overcame it.224 Of these, the two of the same name died a
45   Kings     |       nation of the Macedonians, two kings far excelled the rest
46   Kings     |         the alliance between the two being broken, they went
47  Hannib     | proceeded into Apulia, where the two consuls, Caius Terentius
48  Hannib     |          miles 235 from Zama, in two days and two nights. In
49  Hannib     |       from Zama, in two days and two nights. In the course of
50  Hannib     |        at Rome, so, at Carthage, two kings are annually chosen,
51  Hannib     |           the Carthaginians sent two ships to seize him, if they
52  Hannib     |         Antiochus. Of Mago's end two accounts have been given;
53  Hannib(238)|                        Rex.] The two annual magistrates at Carthage
54  Hannib     |      have given the history; and two of them were persons that
55    Cato(246)|      Aedilis plebis.] There were two sorts of aediles, plebeian
56   Attic     |         country, with the sum of two hundred and fifty sestertia.255
57   Attic     |          be decided which of the two had the greater love for
58   Attic(278)|         is not known. There were two consuls with that surname,
59   Attic     |  unhandsomely, with a fortune of two thousand sestertia,284 which
60   Attic     |          abstained from food for two days, the fever suddenly
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