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Alphabetical [« »] twenty 1 twice 3 twins 4 two 134 tyce 2 typical 1 tyrannus 1 | Frequency [« »] 137 ne 135 antiochus 135 nec 134 two 131 madv 126 after 126 there | Marcus Tullius Cicero Academica Concordances two |
bold = Main text Liber, Caput grey = Comment text
1 Pre | with the Academica. The two books chiefly referred to 2 Int, I | the friendship between the two lasted till the death of 3 Int, I | ambitious works in the last two departments mentioned were 4 Int, I | not unjustly boasts12. For two years he was busily engaged, 5 Int, I | of oratory13.~The whole two years 79—77 B.C. were spent 6 Int, I | eagerly discussed by the two pupils20. Patro was probably 7 Int, I | fragments remain. A year or two later we find him reading 8 Int, I | school of eloquence, to the two boys Marcus and Quintus, 9 Int, II | to the chief schools.~The two main tasks of the later 10 Int, III | exhibited during the last two centuries before the Christian 11 Int, III | than an excellence. For two centuries, if we omit Carneades, 12 Int, III | that the writers of these two centuries are therefore 13 Int, III | and friend of Horace, were two of the most noted of these 14 Int, III | explicitly stated in the two earliest works which we 15 Int, III | encyclopaedia133. The only two works strictly philosophical, 16 Int, IV(150)| distinct mention of the first two books.~ 17 Int, IV | grounds I hold that these two works cannot be those which 18 Int, IV | that they are simply the two books, entitled Catulus 19 Int, IV | style and tone, than any two works of Cicero, excepting 20 Int, IV | ability and culture of these two noble Romans which he knew, 21 Int, IV | promised on his side, full two years before the Academica 22 Int, IV | Varro had been writing for two years without making any 23 Int, IV | like friendship between the two. Apart from these causes 24 Int, IV | into four books instead of two, making the interlocutors 25 Int, IV | dated apparently a day or two later, Cicero declared his 26 Int, IV | put forward concerning the two editions. A fair summary 27 Int, IV | constitution and arrangement of the two editions.~a. The lost dialogue " 28 Int, IV | all the passages where the two are mentioned, that no very 29 Int, IV | so unfortunate as to have two bad consuls in the same 30 Int, IV | lived in the house of the two Catuli225.~[xlvii] ~We have 31 Int, IV | in his earlier days. The two chief sources for Cicero' 32 Int, IV | like friendship between the two. Varro had done the orator 33 Not, 1 | In Ad Fam. IX. 25, 3, the two words even occur without 34 Not, 1 | Gk. αρετη, in Lat virtus. Two passages, D.F. III. 72, 35 Not, 1 | sive or sive—si. This and two or three other similar passages 36 Not, 1 | opere should be written in two words, not as magnopere, 37 Not, 1 | Antiquitatum" were divided into two parts, one treating of res 38 Not, 1 | himself allows to be broken in two similar passages, II. 20, 39 Not, 1 | thinks iam comprises the last two syllables of Academiam, 40 Not, 1 | founds his own text upon it two years after Madvig's crushing 41 Not, 1 | master, from him sprang two schools which abandoned 42 Not, 1 | doubted whether Cic. would let two adverbs stand together without 43 Not, 1 | ethical resemblances of the two schools. In D.F. V. 21, 44 Not, 1 | controversies between the two schools as that about ιδεαι, 45 Not, 1 | duo, but only in duoviros, two near the time of Cic. (C.I. 46 Not, 1 | the ultimate bases of the two are quite different. In 47 Not, 1 | the similarity between the two schools seemed much greater 48 Not, 1 | mental, which fall into two classes, congenital and 49 Not, 1 | Varro seems to merge the two last divisions into one 50 Not, 1 | earth are primary, the two first having an active, 51 Not, 1 | first having an active, the two last a passive function. 52 Not, 1 | only in the compound of the two, the formed entity, which 53 Not, 1 | dryness, moisture, marks the two former as active, the two 54 Not, 1 | two former as active, the two latter as passive. He then 55 Not, 1 | passive. He then assigns two of these properties, one 56 Not, 1 | they drew proofs. In these two processes consisted their 57 Not, 1 | analysed sensation into two parts, an impulse from without, 58 Not, 1 | Academicism by the rivalry of two fellow pupils. Cf. Numenius 59 Not, 1 | the ληπτα (sumenda), the two being utterly different. 60 Not, 1 | oblivion of the et. With two nouns, adjectives, adverbs, 61 Not, 1 | divided the nature of man into two parts, the intellectual 62 Not, 1 | not resemble a war between two separate powers, as in Plato 63 Not, 1 | word επιστημη is used in two ways by the Stoics, (1) 64 Not, 1 | this and more. Reperiuntur: two things vex the edd. (1) 65 Not, 2 | therefore divided the Luc. into two portions at or about 63.~ 66 Not, 2 | IV. 23, where Baiter's two texts (1861 and 1863) give 67 Not, 2 | modo ... sed thrice over in two sentences.~§7. Sunt ... 68 Not, 2 | Liberiores et solutiores: these two words frequently occur together 69 Not, 2 | so all Halm's best MSS. Two, however, of Davies' have 70 Not, 2 | 60, but the last of these two passages is doubtful. Cic. 71 Not, 2 | as is usual with these two words. In 11 one of the 72 Not, 2 | philosopher see Zeller 533. As two MSS. have hac nonne Christ 73 Not, 2 | known at all, from these two passages only.~§17. Patrocinium: 74 Not, 2 | like that of Sextus in the two passages just referred to). 75 Not, 2 | sensus like αισθησις means two things, (1) one of the five 76 Not, 2 | metaphorically to oratory the two words here used, e.g. De 77 Not, 2 | rectum in morals are the two main tasks of philosophy. 78 Not, 2 | could have written it. The two verbs are both trans. of 79 Not, 2 | Then they put forward their two strong arguments, (1) things 80 Not, 2 | also a perception (40). Two admissions, they say, are 81 Not, 2 | partly not. The following two assertions they strive to 82 Not, 2 | Here the things are meant; two things are supposed to cause 83 Not, 2 | things are supposed to cause two sensations so similar that 84 Not, 2 | cannot tell from which of the two things it comes. Under these 85 Not, 2 | absolute similarity of the two sensations which come from 86 Not, 2 | sensations which come from the two dissimilar things, it is 87 Not, 2 | cannot be a definition of two things, (2) if the definition 88 Not, 2 | frequently in Sext. Sumpta: the two premisses are in Gk. called 89 Not, 2 | phenomena (εναργεια) is due to two causes, (1) they do not 90 Not, 2 | allow what is easier, that two sensations caused by two 91 Not, 2 | two sensations caused by two really existing things may 92 Not, 2 | Inaniter: cf. 34. There are two ways in which a sensation 93 Not, 2 | εν ‛ημιν παθων, and the two classes of falsa visa mentioned 94 Not, 2 | this does not mean that the two sensations are merged into 95 Not, 2 | Stoics contended that no two things were absolutely alike. 96 Not, 2 | pupil Persaeus, who took two twins, and made one deposit 97 Not, 2 | that the similarity between two phenomena could never be 98 Not, 2 | change required is to put the two verbs (est) into the subjunctive. 99 Not, 2 | differat, nihil intersit: these two verbs often appear together 100 Not, 2 | easier to distinguish between two genera than between two 101 Not, 2 | two genera than between two individuals. If the non 102 Not, 2 | this neuter, referring to two fem. nouns, is noticeable, 103 Not, 2 | in n. on D.F. V. 26. The two words are often confused, 104 Not, 2 | called conjunction, the two alternatives are marked 105 Not, 2 | non, which Or. added with two very early editions. Faber 106 Not, 2 | words non est include the two meanings "is non existent," 107 Not, 2 | what it seems to be"—the two meanings of falsum indeed, 108 Not, 2 | not concerned to show that two sensations are absolutely 109 Not, 2 | est ista causa. Habes: as two good MSS. have habes et 110 Not, 2 | sometimes however joins the two verbs as in De Or. III. 111 Not, 2 | to define the uses of the two expressions as to define 112 Not, 2 | Lat. to express both of two related things when a word 113 Not, 2 | at all, conj. vigilantis. Two participles used in very 114 Not, 2 | visa, which governs the two genitives. Goer. perversely 115 Not, 2 | A goes on asking whether two, three, four, etc. grains 116 Not, 2 | the συνημμενον consists of two parts, the hypothetical 117 Not, 2 | 98). Carneades laid down two divisions of visa, one into 118 Not, 2 | certainty (103). There are two modes of withholding assent; 119 Not, 2 | cases writes est enim, the two words falling under one 120 Not, 2 | the difference between the two kinds of assent. The general 121 Not, 2 | be as follows. "There are two kinds of εποχη, one which 122 Not, 2 | disagreement (in either of the two senses above noticed), another 123 Not, 2 | this clause as in the other two, he suggests quod sit sine. 124 Not, 2 | world, after which he made two αρχαι, θερμον και ψυχρον 125 Not, 2 | Christian writers attack the two ideas together as unscriptural. 126 Not, 2 | rerum potiendi, etc., but of two genitives depending in different 127 Not, 2 | differences between the two schools are clearly drawn 128 Not, 2 | thinking that the last two letters were first dropt, 129 Not, 2 | libellus: it is not often that two diminutives come together 130 Not, 2 | Circumcidit et amputat: these two verbs often come together, 131 Not, 2 | Istum finem: MSS. ipsum; the two words are often confused, 132 Not, 2 | MSS. have cognitionis, the two words are frequently confused. 133 Not, 2 | order to ridicule these two philosophers, who are playfully 134 Not, 2 | analysed sensations into two parts; with the Academic