IntraText Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library |
Alphabetical [« »] freund 1 friend 18 friendly 2 friends 39 friendship 21 frightful 1 frivolous 1 | Frequency [« »] 39 alexander 39 dionysius 39 force 39 friends 39 person 38 agesilaus 38 day | Cornelius Nepos De Viris Illustribus Concordances friends |
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1 Miltiad | towns to be held by his friends, to whom, if he should be 2 Miltiad | at the exhortation of his friends, in order to reduce Greece 3 Themist | diligently to benefit his friends as well as his own reputation. 4 Themist | bones were buried by his friends in Attica privately, it 5 Lysand | were wont to be the firmest friends who had been steady enemies. 6 Alcib | had made still more his friends by assisting them in legal 7 Alcib | were not so much rendered friends to Alcibiades, as alienated 8 Dion | but the property of his friends; a circumstance which was 9 Dion | commissioned some one of his friends to pretend that he was an 10 Timoth | conjectured how dear he was to his friends. When he was brought to 11 Timoth | at Athens, not only his friends, and others connected with 12 Datam | reckoned in the number of his friends, were laying a plot for 13 Epamin | people, but from his own friends; he was a remarkable keeper 14 Epamin | himself of the means of his friends to maintain himself; but 15 Epamin | common between him and his friends; for when any one of his 16 Epamin | to call a council of his friends, and to prescribe how much 17 Pelop | chief posts to their own friends, while they partly put to 18 Agesil | men were rendered greater friends to them, because they were 19 Agesil | he fell ill and died. His friends, in order the more conveniently 20 Eumen | allotted to each of his friends, and the superintendence 21 Eumen(189)| united with one another as friends, or because they were associates 22 Eumen | others, |397 who had been friends of Alexander, formed similar 23 Eumen | allowed to do so by his friends, because he was certain 24 Eumen | but by the perfidy of my friends.'' Nor was this assertion 25 Eumen | gave Eumenes his life, what friends he would employ? for that 26 Attic | dangers and troubles from his friends, XII.-----Of his private 27 Attic | afforded his services to his friends at Rome; for he used to 28 Attic | Whatever was needful for his friends when going to Pompey, he 29 Attic | services were to be done to friends without regard to party, 30 Attic | him injury, persecuted his friends, sought to spoil his wife 31 Attic | as he could, such of his friends as fled from the city, and 32 Attic | only to him, but to all his friends, and resolved to proscribe 33 Attic | interest except to save his friends from danger or trouble;277 34 Attic | was well known that the friends of Atticus, in times of 35 Attic(277)| dangers or troubles of his friends." ~ 36 Attic | to determine whether his friends' reverence or love for him 37 Attic | young; and that with those friends of the same age as himself, 38 Attic | letters to any one of his friends without writing to Atticus 39 Attic | life for himself and his friends,"----he put a stop to his