Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 37| harbor; they apply the nails, timber, and rigging, with which
2 I, 37| days (from the time the timber was cut down), and being
3 I, 41| Petreius and Afranius, from the timber and hurdles that were carried
4 I, 55| ribs were made of light timber, then, the rest of the hulk
5 I, 59| in a hurry and of green timber, were not so easily maneuvered.
6 II, 2 | made also of very strong timber, and covered over with every
7 II, 10| musculus, sixty feet long, of timber, two feet square, and to
8 II, 10| gentle slope, on which the timber which they must place to
9 II, 11| musculus. The strength of the timber withstood the shock; and
10 II, 15| in consequence of all the timber, far and wide, in the territories
11 II, 15| with the agger, made of timber. But wherever the space
12 II, 15| or the weakness of the timber, seemed to require it, pillars
13 II, 37| the neighboring salt-pits. Timber could not fail him from
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 14 III, 29| opposite to the enemy) all that timber which was cut down, and
15 IV, 17| beams were bound together by timber laid over them, in the direction
16 IV, 18| Within ten days after the timber began to be collected, the
17 IV, 31| into the camp, used the timber and brass of such ships
18 V, 12| imported. There, as in Gaul, is timber of every description, except
19 V, 38| the purpose of procuring timber and therewith constructing
20 V, 39| incredible dispatch out of the timber which they had collected
21 VII, 73| the same time, to procure timber [for the rampart], lay in
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