bold = Main text
   Liber, Caput     grey = Comment text

 1     Int,       I|     Arpinum, and spent the greater part of his time in study.1 From
 2     Int,       I| information concerning the ethical part of Greek philosophy.~During
 3     Int,       I|         employment. In the earlier part of this time we find him
 4     Int,       I|          knowledge. He spent great part of the year 55 at Cumae
 5     Int,       I|          he was again for the most part at those of his country
 6     Int,      IV|       grumbles, it may be, that my part in the treatise is more
 7     Int,      IV|           thither!" Atticus on his part "shuddered" at the idea
 8     Int,      IV|   Academics250. The most important part of the speech, however,
 9     Int,      IV|         deal with the constructive part of Academicism253 seem to
10     Int,      IV|            a bare statement on the part of the latter of the negative
11     Int,      IV|           the conclusion that this part of the dialogue was mainly
12     Int,      IV|            in his answer to Varro, part of which is preserved in
13     Int,      IV|            seem to imply that this part of his teaching had been
14     Int,      IV|           Varro, describes his own part as that of Philo (partes
15     Int,      IV|         the comparatively inferior part of Hortensius, while Brutus
16     Int,      IV|         which in ed. 1. had formed part of the answer made by Cicero
17     Not,       1|         leads to a proposal on the part of Cic. to discuss thoroughly
18     Not,       1|       history of Philosophy. First part of Varro's Exposition, 15—
19     Not,       1|            cf. note on 7.~§§1923. Part II. of Varro's Exposition:
20     Not,       1|          in which virtue has chief part, and is capable in itself
21     Not,       1|       Forma see n. on 33.~§§2429. Part III of Varro's Exposition.
22     Not,       1|             since force plays this part in the compound," utroque
23     Not,       1|       Plato, III. 24959.~§§3032. Part iv. of Varro's Exposition:
24     Not,       1|      changing and fleeting that no part of their being remained
25     Not,       1|         aim ofρητορικη.~§§3342. Part v. of Varro's exposition:
26     Not,       1|           dealt with in the latter part of the same sentence and
27     Not,       1|           in my notes on the first part of the Lucullus. In his
28     Not,       2|        seems to have imitated that part of Cicero's exposition to
29     Not,       2|          This fragm. clearly forms part of those anticipatory sceptical
30     Not,       2|          the above extracts formed part of an argument intended
31     Not,       2|           BOOK III.~12. This forms part of Varro's answer to Cicero,
32     Not,       2|          that this fragment formed part of an attempt to show that
33     Not,       2|          This may well have formed part of Varro's explanation of
34     Not,       2|           of this edition. To that part this fragment must probably
35     Not,       2|           be a summary of the lost part of Book I. to the following
36     Not,       2|           perfect labefeci and the part, labefactus is quite wrong.
37     Not,       2|         several times in the early part of the sentence, all of
38     Not,       2|      fidunt, etc.: these lines are part of Cic.'s Aratea, and are
39     Not,       2|      utterance of a maniac. For my part, I do not see why the poet
40     Not,       2|            parts, the hypothetical part and the affirmative—called
41     Not,       2|    respondere makes cur deus, etc. part of the same sentence. Bait.
42     Not,       2|          Tu vero: etc. this is all part of the personal convicium
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