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Alphabetical [« »] eis 5 eisin 1 eita 1 either 29 eitines 1 eius 39 eiusdem 16 | Frequency [« »] 29 common 29 comprehendi 29 deinde 29 either 29 just 29 make 29 manut | Marcus Tullius Cicero Academica Concordances either |
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1 Pre | for an exhaustive edition either from my own or some more 2 Int, I| does not seem to have known either personally. ~From the year 3 Int, III| pronounce this judgment must either insist upon trying the work 4 Int, IV| conquer, otherwise he must either abandon Tusculum altogether, 5 Int, IV| fortune, could ever inspire either fear or hope, or cause to 6 Int, IV| that he was an adherent either of the Academic or Peripatetic 7 Not, 1| Epicurus is dealt with, we have either ne suspicari quidem or ne 8 Not, 1| Plato has not this division, either consciously or unconsciously, 9 Not, 1| These formed entities are either primary or secondary. Air, 10 Not, 1| ποιον in Greek, which may either denote the τοδε τι as ποιον, 11 Not, 1| denied the existence of void either within or without the universe, 12 Not, 1| knowledge of such things as were either too small to come into the 13 Not, 1| against their being called either bona or mala, and this question 14 Not, 2| agreed with some lost noun either in the neut. plur. or fem. 15 Not, 2| could only have occurred either in the speech of Catulus 16 Not, 2| was fleeing. We then must either maintain Zeno's definition 17 Not, 2| animal is to act. You must either therefore deprive it of 18 Not, 2| credit cannot be given to either class (42). [The word "perception" 19 Not, 2| things, from those which either are mere phantoms or, having 20 Not, 2| here "they do not see this either," cf. n. on I. 5. Habeant: 21 Not, 2| word is ambiguous, meaning either qualified or unqualified 22 Not, 2| Introd. p. 53. Sequere: either this is future, as in 109, 23 Not, 2| wrongly caused many edd. either to read respondere (as Dav., 24 Not, 2| that Cic. is translating either παθος or κινησις. For a 25 Not, 2| not necessary, however, either in Gk. or Lat. to express 26 Not, 2| approbare and improbare may mean either to render an absolute approval 27 Not, 2| assent or disagreement (in either of the two senses above 28 Not, 2| will not assent absolutely either to his system or to yours ( 29 Not, 2| Ut Herillum. MSS. have either Erillum or et illum, one