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 1     Pre         |        means of which the student might illustrate for himself a
 2     Pre         |           it were new to him, and might solve any linguistic difficulty
 3     Int,       I|     teacher whose lectures Cicero might have attended, though M.
 4     Int,       I|         of philosophical study as might be obtained from the actual
 5     Int,      II|   unattended by other advantages, might be happy, but could not
 6     Int,     III| philosophy, and a careless reader might set them down to egotism.
 7     Int,      IV|     afraid of the effect the work might produce on the public. This
 8     Int,      IV|           approve any course that might be taken196. Atticus wrote
 9     Int,      IV|   Antipater of Sidon241. Still it might have been concluded that
10     Int,      IV|        such as any cultivated man might sustain who had not definitely
11     Int,      IV|          here notice a fact which might puzzle the student. In some
12     Not,       1|           order that the populace might be enticed to read. To my
13     Not,       1|         anapaestus (T.D. III. 57) Might we not read philosophis,
14     Not,       1|          given above, the student might with advantage read Aristotle'
15     Not,       1|          is Stoic. This statement might have been made both by Aristotle
16     Not,       1|          Plato and Aristotle (one might almost add, with moderns
17     Not,       1|           reason, or (as the case might be) by habit." Ea genera
18     Not,       1|          a hundred other passages might be quoted from Cic.~§44.
19     Not,       2|      distinctive about this which might enable us to determine its
20     Not,       2|          on which he takes action might prove to be false? (23)
21     Not,       2|        Academics were true, a man might really be in pain when he
22     Not,       2|           to physical science, we might urge that nature has constructed
23     Not,       2|        produce sensations such as might have been produced in the
24     Not,       2|      reality, has a form which it might have if it proceeded from
25     Not,       2|         that visa, in themselves, might be true or false, but affirmed
26     Not,       2|           permotiones intimas) it might appear that Cic. is translating
27     Not,       2|           Quod abesset: "whatever might be 1800 stadia distant,"
28     Not,       2|        D.F. IV. 7. Ut Poenus: "as might be expected from a Carthaginian;"
29     Not,       2|          course that the artisans might all be at the meeting, for
30     Not,       2|     phenomena. This dogma Catulus might well describe himself as
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