IntraText Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library |
Alphabetical [« »] meagre 1 meam 1 mean 13 meaning 47 meanings 3 means 26 meant 13 | Frequency [« »] 47 against 47 lamb 47 man 47 meaning 47 passages 47 qua 47 sapiens | Marcus Tullius Cicero Academica Concordances meaning |
bold = Main text Liber, Caput grey = Comment text
1 Pre | bad texts to the author's meaning and to a mastery of the 2 Int, IV| πολιτικοι at Athens. The meaning of the last question is 3 Int, IV| thus obtains its natural meaning. Cicero uses the word συνταξις 4 Int, IV| necessity of forcing the meaning of the word commoveris261, 5 Not, 1| it stands has exactly the meaning these alterations are intended 6 Not, 1| from the MSS. reading? The meaning would then be "to write 7 Not, 1| Procuratio: for the proper meaning of procurator and procuratio 8 Not, 1| him the words "tui cives," meaning the Athenians, often occur. 9 Not, 1| 185, which will show the meaning to be the distinct marking 10 Not, 1| perceiving that it has the strong meaning of the Gr. εδοκει, "it was 11 Not, 1| Halm for MSS. eaque. The meaning is this; passive matter 12 Not, 1| vi et materia) fit, the meaning is clearly given by the 13 Not, 1| alicubi esse cogatur: the meaning of this is clear, that nothing 14 Not, 1| dittographia from utro. The meaning would be "since force plays 15 Not, 1| existence substance. The meaning is "out of which qualia, 16 Not, 1| MS. without regard to the meaning of Cic. has greatly increased 17 Not, 1| each would put a separate meaning on the word notio. Επιστημη 18 Not, 1| reasoner. Bentl. missing the meaning conj. definiret. Peracute 19 Not, 1| on the strong negative meaning which minor bears in Latin, 20 Not, 1| usually have an opposite meaning. Now I contend that Cicero' 21 Not, 1| quite as strong a negative meaning as the phrase of Sextus, 22 Not, 1| ei. Non quod omnia: the meaning is that the reason must 23 Not, 1| the neut. adj. and not as meaning but. Translate: "Yet I think 24 Not, 2| carere comes from a root skar meaning to divide, see Corss. I. 25 Not, 2| appealing to," the true meaning being "to appeal to with 26 Not, 2| quod with Bentl. For the meaning cf. T.D. III. 69 and Arist. 27 Not, 2| Pertinaciam: the exact meaning of this may be seen from 28 Not, 2| but gives no exx. For the meaning cf. De Off. I. 86, Aug. 29 Not, 2| 33 it receives its proper meaning, for which see Madv. there, 30 Not, 2| κινημα της διανοιας. For the meaning see n. on 47. Relinquitur: 31 Not, 2| indistinguishable from the true (this meaning of inter quae nihil sit 32 Not, 2| this word is ambiguous, meaning either qualified or unqualified 33 Not, 2| Madv. Em. 177 took verum as meaning fair, candid, in this explanation 34 Not, 2| with identically the same meaning Dav. quotes Solinus and 35 Not, 2| Madere is common with the meaning "to be drunk," as in Plaut. 36 Not, 2| adj. has not the strong meaning of the Eng. "hateful," but 37 Not, 2| Cic. often has the same meaning as an adj. in -bilis. Faber 38 Not, 2| homo acutus. A different meaning is given by the ut in passages 39 Not, 2| the words have the first meaning, in 66 the second. The same 40 Not, 2| putting upon it his own meaning of course. Doubtless a Peripatetic 41 Not, 2| βοσκηματων βιος in Aristotle. The meaning of pecus is well shown in 42 Not, 2| 12. This is probably the meaning here; "do we use the name 43 Not, 2| Arbitrari: the original meaning of this was "to be a bystander," 44 Not, 2| The dogma is that assent (meaning absolute assent) is not 45 Not, 2| practice is to give assent (meaning modified assent). There 46 Not, 2| with regard to the second meaning, cf. Caes. Bell. Gall. IV. 47 Not, 2| that he had mistaken the meaning of the word, substituted