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 1     Int,      IV|    Nonius' quotations, which are always from the second edition,
 2     Not,       1|           II. 314. Ortam a: Cic. always writes the prep. after ortus;
 3     Not,       1|           Quidem, however nearly always comes closely after the
 4     Not,       1|       forgeries. The ablative is always conditioned by some verb,
 5     Not,       1|   correspond in Cic., the que is always an afterthought, added in
 6     Not,       1|          D. III. p. 8, says Cic. always uses efferri laetitia but
 7     Not,       1|          material substances. He always guards himself from assigning
 8     Not,       2|     parenthetic clause with etsi always has a common verb with its
 9     Not,       2|        in Cic., and the relative always refers to an actually expressed
10     Not,       2|      have annos. The ablative is always used to express point of
11     Not,       2|       Democriti verecundia: Cic. always has a kind of tenderness
12     Not,       2|          will show that the word always means merely "disordered,
13     Not,       2|        action of the senses must always be removed, in practice
14     Not,       2|          removed, in practice we always do remove them where we
15     Not,       2|         potest esse: Cic. nearly always writes putat esse, potest
16     Not,       2|         21. Agere: the dogmatist always held that the sceptic must,
17     Not,       2|       the percipient subject has always other synchronous sensations
18     Not,       2|  perceptions, while the true are always of a form which the false
19     Not,       2| Interrogationis: the sorites was always in the form of a series
20     Not,       2|    phrases like this Cic. nearly always places esse second, especially
21     Not,       2|       absurd, for surely it must always be easier to distinguish
22     Not,       2|           remarks on D.F. I. 20, always exaggerates the merits of
23     Not,       2|         Exprimere and dicere are always sharply distinguished by
24     Not,       2|          of attack is that Logic always assumes the truth of phenomena,
25     Not,       2|     grains make a heap. B cannot always reply "No." When he begins
26     Not,       2|         seem to him true; yet he always feels that there is a possibility
27     Not,       2|          asseverative ne is thus always closely joined with pronouns
28     Not,       2|         Concessisse primas: Cic. always considers Thales to be sapientissimus
29     Not,       2|      follows. Nostra causa: Cic. always writes mea, tua, vestra,
30     Not,       2|      notes that except here Cic. always writes exigua et paene minima
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