bold = Main text
   Liber, Caput     grey = Comment text

 1     Pre         |      introduced emendations of my own, and that only where the
 2     Pre         |           many references from my own reading, and from other
 3     Pre         |         and have only dwelt in my own language upon such philosophical
 4     Pre         | exhaustive edition either from my own or some more competent hand.
 5     Int,       I|          main tenets of each. His own statements, after every
 6     Int,       I|     revisited Athens, much to his own pleasure and that of the
 7     Int,      II|         to be reconciled with his own oft-repeated statements
 8     Int,     III|      thing he proclaims to be his own is his style. Looked at
 9     Int,      IV|         which he knew, and in his own letters to Atticus admitted,
10     Int,      IV|           dedication187.~Cicero's own judgment about the completed
11     Int,      IV|      presentation will be at your own risk. So if you begin to
12     Int,      IV|          cause to swerve from his own course219. His influence,
13     Int,      IV|          written a history of his own deeds, in the style of Xenophon,
14     Int,      IV|           to Varro, describes his own part as that of Philo (partes
15     Not,       1|         recensio," and founds his own text upon it two years after
16     Not,       1|      often adopted by Cic. in his own person, as in D.F. IV. 5
17     Not,       1|      glaring contradiction to his own rules about admitting metre
18     Not,       1|      Antiochus in reconciling his own dialectics with Plato's
19     Not,       1|       alone, and evidently on his own conjecture, inserts igitur,
20     Not,       1|             The remainder has its own difficulties, which I defer
21     Not,       1|           whole truth lies in its own εναργεια, which requires
22     Not,       1|           of carrying with it its own evidence, had to pass through
23     Not,       2|           and let them take their own way. See another view in
24     Not,       2|      rigour, and yet excepted his own officers from its operation.
25     Not,       2|          of Carneades to suit his own. As to (1) all ancient testimony
26     Not,       2|        held things to be in their own nature καταληπτα (‛οσον
27     Not,       2|         which he disproves to his own satisfaction (Adv. Math.
28     Not,       2|    imperfect, I will give Sextus' own explanation. The merely
29     Not,       2|           that each thing has its own peculiar marks (55, 56).
30     Not,       2|      found a school called by his own name. It is more probable
31     Not,       2|          Cic. was thinking of his own famous oath at the end of
32     Not,       2|           he knew nothing but his own ignorance, while Plato pursued
33     Not,       2|         everything belongs to its own genus this I will not contest.
34     Not,       2|         and his Alcmaeon, of your own relative Tuditanus, of the
35     Not,       2|       Alcmaeo autem: i.e. Ennius' own Alcmaeon; cf. 52. Somnia
36     Not,       2|         the consequences of their own principles, according to
37     Not,       2|      formula, putting upon it his own meaning of course. Doubtless
38     Not,       2|          Stoic sapiens out of his own mouth, cf. esp. nec ille
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