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Alphabetical [« »] musicam 1 musicians 1 musicis 1 must 105 mutabile 1 mutari 3 mutation 1 | Frequency [« »] 108 stoic 107 been 106 word 105 must 104 may 102 2 102 only | Marcus Tullius Cicero Academica Concordances must |
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1 Pre | succeeding editor of Cicero must build. His edition of the 2 Pre | more competent hand. It must be regarded as an experiment, 3 Int, I| fair to conclude that he must have become thoroughly acquainted 4 Int, I| explicitly stated. Cicero must at this time have attained 5 Int, I| he writes that politics must cease for him, and that 6 Int, I| success of the defence I must leave the reader to judge. 7 Int, II| the ethical standard, we must never forget that it was 8 Int, II| refused it with horror108. It must be admitted that on some 9 Int, II| as all natural theology must be, an appendage of physical 10 Int, II| especially important. It must not be forgotten, also, 11 Int, III| passage seems to allow, must have been of little real 12 Int, III| down to egotism. But it must never be forgotten that 13 Int, III| pronounce this judgment must either insist upon trying 14 Int, III| composition, the student must be referred to the Dict. 15 Int, IV| to conquer, otherwise he must either abandon Tusculum 16 Int, IV| Hortensius and the Academica must have been more closely connected, 17 Int, IV| Catulus226. The feigned date must fall between the year 60 18 Int, IV| considerable portion of the speech must have been directed against 19 Int, IV| of the speech, however, must have consisted of a defence 20 Int, IV| distinctly aimed at Cicero, who must have represented it in the 21 Int, IV| a historical summary. He must have dealt with the theory 22 Int, IV| Yet these arguments must have occupied some considerable 23 Int, IV| Cato. Consequently Cato must have taken the comparatively 24 Int, IV| examination of its contents must be postponed till I come 25 Int, IV| Varro's life the student must be referred to the ordinary 26 Int, IV| same as in ed. 1. Atticus must have been almost a κωφον 27 Not, 1| Epistolarum, p. 62) shows that it must be inserted. Cic. writes 28 Not, 1| quia be read above, eum must be ejected altogether. Quaedam 29 Not, 1| his usage did not vary, he must in the vast majority of 30 Not, 1| best MSS. authority, it must be kept, and adhibenda etiam 31 Not, 1| If erunt is read, erit must be supplied from it to go 32 Not, 1| Peripatetic, if so, they must belong only to the late 33 Not, 1| about space the student must be referred to the histories 34 Not, 1| Anaxagoras. The confusion must not be laid at Cicero's 35 Not, 1| dialectics with Plato's must have been driven to desperate 36 Not, 1| Definitiones rerum: these must be carefully distinguished 37 Not, 1| Stoic ethics the student must in general consult R. and 38 Not, 1| this section the student must read the whole of the chapters 39 Not, 1| in the place of sumenda, must be rejected. Nor can anything 40 Not, 1| D.F. II. 88 frui dolore must be construed together, and 41 Not, 1| in ratione esse dicerent must be repeated but dicerent 42 Not, 1| word ‛εξις, a use which must be clearly distinguished 43 Not, 1| follows that the Stoic sapiens must be emotionless (Zeller 228 44 Not, 1| soul as an αρχη κινησεως must be ακινητος, but Cic. had 45 Not, 1| meaning is that the reason must generalize on separate sensations 46 Not, 2| fragment belongs. If so Cic. must have condemned the unwarrantable 47 Not, 2| these assaults on the senses must have been summed up in the 48 Not, 2| after a certain point we must cease to fight against perverse 49 Not, 2| the reference in Nonius must be wrong. The talk about 50 Not, 2| therefore in this passage must have agreed with some lost 51 Not, 2| that part this fragment must probably be referred.~34. 52 Not, 2| that the Academic school must not be supposed to have 53 Not, 2| effect. The New Academy must not be regarded as having 54 Not, 2| historical exposition of Cic. must have ended. From this portion 55 Not, 2| not to know philosophy, must be referred to the examples 56 Not, 2| This is natural, but they must know that Academicism puts 57 Not, 2| in T.D. I. 57. litteris must be an ablative of the instrument. 58 Not, 2| he was fleeing. We then must either maintain Zeno's definition 59 Not, 2| εναπομεμαγμενη in the Gk. It must not be forgotten that the 60 Not, 2| every sensation, Epicurus must see to that. Things which 61 Not, 2| the action of the senses must always be removed, in practice 62 Not, 2| certain to guide her? There must he some ground on which 63 Not, 2| can proceed (24). Credence must be given to the thing which 64 Not, 2| happiness of the sapiens must be proof against the rack; 65 Not, 2| the sapiens of the Academy must be desertor officiorum omnium. 66 Not, 2| always held that the sceptic must, if consistent, be ανενεργητος 67 Not, 2| the sceptic says, there must be a proof to show it impossible; 68 Not, 2| impossible; the sceptic doctrine must be provable. Cf. 109 of 69 Not, 2| noted that συγκαταθεσις must take place before the ‛ορμη 70 Not, 2| refers to this passage, which must have been preserved in the 71 Not, 2| the sensations themselves must be examined; the time at 72 Not, 2| an animal is to act. You must either therefore deprive 73 Not, 2| capable, (2) sensations must be assumed to be of the 74 Not, 2| singulisque rebus: the word rebus must mean subjects, not things, 75 Not, 2| to one thing, that thing must be capable of being thoroughly 76 Not, 2| which is more important, must also be known. In illa vera 77 Not, 2| as to be probable"). It must not be repeated after the 78 Not, 2| in 136. Proferremus: this must apparently be added to the 79 Not, 2| is absurd, for surely it must always be easier to distinguish 80 Not, 2| esoteric dogmatic doctrine, must have originated in the reactionary 81 Not, 2| III. 41 (whose authority must have been Cicero), be attributed 82 Not, 2| form in Cic. of the pres., must be read. Approbatione omni: 83 Not, 2| aliqui adjectival, aliquis must not be written with impersonal 84 Not, 2| answered. First, however, I must speak something that concerns 85 Not, 2| that I make slips, but we must deal with the sapiens, whose 86 Not, 2| Still, our whole argument must tend to show that perception 87 Not, 2| which, it has been supposed, must refer back to the second 88 Not, 2| II. 60, T.D. IV. 9, and must be carefully distinguished 89 Not, 2| that Socrates and Plato must not be classed with these. 90 Not, 2| points out that Protagoras must in accordance with his doctrine 91 Not, 2| rules of Dialectic. You must go to a tribune for that 92 Not, 2| identical with it in form must stand or fall together ( 93 Not, 2| not διαλεκτικη but ηθικη must decide this. Quae coniunctio: 94 Not, 2| Loquendi: the Stoic λογικη, it must be remembered, included ‛ 95 Not, 2| 105—111. Summary. You must see, Lucullus, by this time, 96 Not, 2| seeking will select (117). He must choose one teacher from 97 Not, 2| great men though they be, he must reject (118). Whatever system 98 Not, 2| Whatever system he selects he must know absolutely; if the 99 Not, 2| absolutely; if the Stoic, he must believe as strongly in the 100 Not, 2| you, however, Lucullus, must defend the Stoics and spurn 101 Not, 2| perceptions on the same level. You must be prepared to asseverate 102 Not, 2| these physici the student must in general be referred to 103 Not, 2| is retained complebitur must be read. Madv. Opusc. II. 104 Not, 2| Stoics are irate (132). I must be careful not to assent 105 Not, 2| apposition to par, so that cum must not be taken closely with