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   Liber, Caput     grey = Comment text

 1     Pre         |           Classical training of a great deal of its old educational
 2     Pre         |         after Madvig's labours, a great deal remains to be done
 3     Pre         |           need. Moreover, it is a great gain, even at the cost of
 4     Int,       I| overthrown for ever, and that the great career once open to an orator
 5     Int,       I|        little doubt that from the great rhetorician Molo, then Rhodian
 6     Int,       I|     universal knowledge. He spent great part of the year 55 at Cumae
 7     Int,       I|         Memmius, the pupil of the great Roman Epicurean Lucretius,
 8     Int,      II|          these schools is still a great desideratum. Cicero's statements
 9     Int,      II|          In looking at the second great problem, that of the ethical
10     Int,      II|    religious ideas he calls them "great and famous philosophers99,"
11     Int,      II|        his teacher Antiochus. One great question which divided the
12     Int,      II|      theology, and he defends the great sceptic by the plea that
13     Int,      II|      tenderly for the sake of its great past, deeming it a worthy
14     Int,     III|         impossible to include the great poet in his sweeping condemnation,
15     Int,     III|    patriots immediately after the great war. Others, like the Neoptolemus
16     Int,     III|        philosophy was good, but a great deal was a dangerous thing128.
17     Int,      IV|         to dedicate to Cicero his great work De Lingua Latino. In
18     Int,      IV|           copy for Varro received great attention, and the letter
19     Int,      IV|    theories which old scholars of great repute put forward concerning
20     Int,      IV|         was once more lauded, and great stress was laid upon the
21     Int,      IV|           was made to discuss the great difference between the dogmatic
22     Int,      IV|       Catulus had repudiated with great warmth, even charging Philo
23     Int,      IV|        philosophy, who appeals to great and ancient names like a
24     Int,      IV|         dedicate some work to the great polymath. After the fall
25     Not,       1|           question was one of the great battle grounds of the later
26     Not,       1|       known to Cic. and had taken great hold on his mind One from
27     Not,       1|         from Heraclitus who was a great hero of the Stoics (Zeller
28     Not,       2|           Classical period had so great an influence on the culture
29     Not,       2|          He unexpectedly proved a great general. This was due to
30     Not,       2|       departure from the MSS. too great, keeps vetera and changes
31     Not,       2|          appellabat: Cic. was the great advocate for the Latinisation
32     Not,       2|          has constructed man with great art. His mind is naturally
33     Not,       2|          phenomena could never be great enough to render it impossible
34     Not,       2|        the Cyrenaic school; their great word was παθος. From 143 (
35     Not,       2|           Contra Ac. III. 29 lays great stress on the necessary
36     Not,       2|         by μεν and δε, has been a great crux of edd.; Dav. here
37     Not,       2|           103. Esse conexum: with great probability Christ supposes
38     Not,       2|           The remaining teachers, great men though they be, he must
39     Not,       2|          opus, in the sense of "a great task," is equally so, cf.
40     Not,       2|      later Peripatetics were to a great degree Stoicised. Nunc:
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