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 1     Pre     |         the excellencies of the Greeks, have had regard to their
 2     Pre(3)  |    flutes, is used, because the Greeks, and the Romans, who adopted
 3     Pre(6)  |         female actors among the Greeks. For ad scenam Freinshemius (
 4 Miltiad     |       but also those who, being Greeks by birth, inhabited Asia,
 5 Themist     | communication was, that all the Greeks should be forced to fight
 6 Themist     |          a man, who, of all the Greeks, brought most evil upon
 7  Pausan     |        by no very large army of Greeks; and the general himself
 8  Pausan     |    temple of Neptune, which the Greeks account it a heinous crime
 9   Alcib     |         after the manner of the Greeks, and among them by Socrates,
10   Alcib     |       from barbarians than from Greeks. In consequence his fame |
11   Alcib(74) |        and where no colonies of Greeks had been established.----
12   Conon     |         to the king" (which the Greeks call proskunei=n): "if this
13  Iphicr     |        highest repute among the Greeks. ~Going afterwards to the
14   Datam(135)|      made of cloth doubled. The Greeks called it xlai=na diplh~.----
15  Epamin     |   Remarks on the manners of the Greeks, I.----Youth and manhood
16  Epamin     |       accomplishments among the Greeks are regarded both as pleasing
17  Epamin(147)|       among the Epistles of the Greeks published by Aldus, and
18   Eumen     |        honourable 188 among the Greeks than among the |396 Romans;
19   Kings(221)|        biographies are those of Greeks, except that of Datames. ~
20  Hannib(238)|        in the Punic tongue; the Greeks and Romans called them kings. ~
21    Frag     |       compared with that of the Greeks, but was left rude and inchoate
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