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Marcus Tullius Cicero Academica Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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507 Not, 1 | sect, and it placed νους εν αιθερι (see Plutarch, qu. R. and 508 Not, 1 | the fifth element (σωμα αιθεριον in the De Coelo), and of 509 Not, 1 | therefore is defined as αιτια αδηλος ανθρωπινωι λογισμωι ( 510 Not, 1 | αναγκην, which is ειρμος αιτιων, causarum series sempiterna ( 511 Int, IV | ανηρ, ταχα κεν και αναιτιον αιτιοωιτο.~So there often flits before 512 Not, 2 | η περι σοφιστειας προς Ακαδημαικους, mentioned by Suidas.~§58. 513 Int, IV | expressions Academica quaestio, Ακαδημικη συνταξις, and Academia, 514 Not, 2 | by Zeno. The doctrine of ακαταληψια though present to the minds 515 Int, IV(286)| words quae erant contra ακαταληψιαν praeclare collecta ab Antiocho: 516 Not, 2 | διαφοραν ειναι αδηλου και ακαταληπτου, και παντα μεν ειναι ακαταληπτα 517 Not, 2 | here have igni. Crinitus: ακερσεκομης, "never shorn," as Milton 518 Not, 1 | an αρχη κινησεως must be ακινητος, but Cic. had no means of 519 Not, 1 | same in T.D. IV. 22, Gk. ακολασια, see Zeller 232. Quintam 520 Not, 1 | sensation is involuntary (ακουσιον Sext. Emp. Adv. Math. VIII. 521 Not, 2 | trans. of ακριβως or κατ' ακριβειαν (passim in Sext. e.g. P. 522 Not, 2 | Cic.'s constant trans. of ακριβως or κατ' ακριβειαν (passim 523 Not, 1 | Off. I. 133. Impressionem: al. expressionem. For the former 524 Not, 2 | thou but kept to thy word, Alban!" Here the condition "if 525 Not, 2 | English, e.g. "tu dictis Albane maneres" may fairly be translated, " 526 II, XXXIII | nunc, qua a sole collucet, albescit et vibrat dissimileque est 527 II, XLV | in Capitolio starent, A. Albinum, qui tum P. Scipione et 528 Not, 2 | the Stoic Paradoxes! (136) Albinus joking said to Carneades " 529 Not, 1 | Baiter) adopts the conj. of Aldus the younger, Graeca desideres. 530 Not, 2 | 410) πασηι τη δοκουσηι αληθει καθεσταναι ευρισκεται τις 531 Not, 2 | confused." Cf. κοινη φαντασια αληθους και ψευδους Sext. A.M. VII. 532 Not, 2 | used by Polemo; cf. Clemens Alex. qu. by Madv. on D.F. IV. 533 Not, 2 | privileged to make statues of Alexander, as Apelles alone was allowed 534 II, XIX | Haec Antiochus fere et Alexandreae tum et multis annis post, 535 II, I | apparatu, ut ille rex post Alexandrum maximus hunc a se maiorem 536 II, XXIV | minutos, Stilponem, Diodorum, Alexinum, quorum sunt contorta et 537 | alicui 538 Not, 1 | MSS. variant. Aliena: cf. alienatos D.F. III. 18. A virtute 539 II, XVIII | cognoscebantur foris, at domi: non ab alienis, at a suis. An non videmus 540 II, XVI | suo genere essent et in alieno. 51. Quod fieri qui potest? 541 II, XXIX | tria pauca sint anne multa, aliquanto prius quam ad multa perveniat 542 II, X | paulo abstrusior—habet enim aliquantum a physicis—, ut verear ne 543 Not, 2 | Atridae, keeps Odysseus alive awhile in order to torture 544 Not, 2 | ημερα εστι, φως εστιν ... αλλα μην ‛ημερα εστιν φως αρα 545 Not, 2 | poterit: as the Academics allege. Naturae ... alienum: Cic. 546 Not, 2 | Greek τροποι (Brut. 69) and αλληγορια in De Or. II. 261, where 547 Not, 1 | εκατερα λογους ισοκρατεις αλληλοις, Sextus Adv. Math. IX. 207 548 Not, 1 | διαφεροντα πασχειν ‛υπ' αλληλων, qu. from Arist. De Gen. 549 Not, 1 | and omnia both as neut.—"alles und jedes." Cic. knew the 550 Not, 2 | in Egypt and the East in alliance with Rome. The censorship 551 Int, IV | Cicero suppose himself to be allied to Catulus, that a friend 552 Not, 2 | subject) ‛οι Στωικοι και αλλοι τινες. For other modes of 553 Not, 1 | 182 A, where it is called αλλοκοτον ονομα. Nova ... facienda: = 554 Int, IV | to Varro the Academica, allowing that Catulus and Lucullus, 555 Not, 2 | on 19. Tennyson seems to allude to this in his "Higher Pantheism"—" 556 Not, 2 | aureum: Plut. Vita Cic. 24 alludes to this (‛οτι χρυσιου ποταμος 557 Int, II | than a human world, which allured Cicero more than the barrenness 558 Not, 2 | ανθρωπος. ... φυσει γαρ εισιν αλογοι ... δει δε εις φαντασιαν 559 Not, 1 | laetitia for instance is αλογος επαρσις. (T.D. Books III. 560 II, XLVI | sentio, non magna contentio. Alteram si sequare, multa ruunt 561 Not, 2 | deo: would enter into an altercation with the god. The phrase, 562 Not, 2 | I cannot follow Halm in altering the reading to approbavit.~§ 563 II, XXIII | probavisset. Ironiam enim alterius, perpetuam praesertim, nulla 564 Not, 2 | called conjunction, the two alternatives are marked by ne and an. 565 II, X | artis efficit, quasi sensus alteros, et usque eo philosophiam 566 Not, 1 | De Off. I. 43, where Wes. alters it) or the like. Satis eum 567 Not, 2 | contiones see Lange, Romische Alterthumer II. 663, ed 2. They were 568 Not, 2 | latiores. Halm with Lamb. reads altiores, in support of which reading 569 II, XX | duce nocturna Phoenices in alto,'~ut ait Aratus, eoque directius 570 Not, 2 | Timaeus Cic. translates αλυτος by indissolutus and indissolubilis 571 Not, 2 | φαντασιαν και την πιθανην ‛αμα και απερισπαστον και διεξωδευμενην ( 572 Not, 1 | ante Socratem: MSS. veluti amantes Socratem; Democritus (460— 573 II, XXXVI | tam bonos, tam inter se amantis viros, Diodoto quid faciam 574 Not, 1 | κατορθωμα, peccatum = ‛αμαρτημα, officium = καθηκον (cf. 575 Not, 1 | this in the Stoic texts; αμαθια is very seldom talked of 576 Int, I | rhetorician Molo, then Rhodian ambassador at Rome, Cicero gained valuable 577 II, XXVIII | tradit elementa loquendi et ambiguorum intellegentiam concludendique 578 Not, 2 | Adprobare: this word is ambiguous, meaning either qualified 579 I, III | enim, ut res est—dum me ambitio, dum honores, dum causae, 580 Int, I | and belles lettres. Many ambitious works in the last two departments 581 II, XLII | cum honestate Diodorus: ambo hi Peripatetici. Honeste 582 II, XXV | fortasse in porticu Neptuni ambulantem, non videmus. 81. At ille 583 II, XVI | Visus sum mihi cum Galba ambulare?' At, cum somniavit, ita 584 II, XVI | cum Ser. Galba vicino suo ambulavisset, dixisse: 'Visus sum mihi 585 II, II | multi qui omnino Graecas non ament litteras, plures qui philosophiam, 586 Not, 2 | H. III. 39), στιγμη = το αμερες (A.M. IX. 283, 377). Extremitatem: = 587 Not, 1 | φαντασιαι were ασφαλεις, αμεταπτωτοι ‛υπο λογου. Later Stoics, 588 Not, 2 | 367. Stabilem: βεβαιον και αμεταπτωτου. Artem vivendi: "tralaticium 589 Not, 2 | vivet". Ambigue dictum: αμφιβολον, on which see P.H. II. 256, 590 Not, 2 | appearance proceeds) ουδεις ισως αμφισβητει, περι δε του ει τοιουτον 591 Not, 2 | In utramque partem: επ' αμφοτερα, cf. I. 45. Exprimant: " 592 Int, I | praise of his teacher's amiable disposition and refined 593 I, I | studiis isdem et vetustate amicitiae coniunctum. Itaque confestim 594 II, IX | proditur, quo e vitio et amicitiarum proditiones et rerum publicarum 595 I, I | atque ilium complexi, ut mos amicorum est, satis eum longo intervallo 596 I, II | munus homini. 8. Sed meos amicos, in quibus est studium, 597 Not, 1 | other hand Bentley (if the amicus so often quoted in Davies' 598 II, XLI | illustriores videantur, amittere. Non enim magis adsentiuntur 599 I, V | perge, Varro: valde enim amo nostra atque nostros, meque 600 II, X | aptissima cum sit mens hominis, amplectitur maxime cognitionem, et istam 601 II, VII | expletam rerum comprehensionem amplectuntur: 'si homo est, animal est 602 I, IX | quas mirifice Plato erat amplexatus, ut in iis quiddam divinum 603 II, II | ne talium personarum cum amplificare velim, minuam etiam gloriam. 604 II, II | eius tractatio optimo atque amplissimo quoque dignissima est, nec 605 Int, III | studies were merely the amusement of the wealthy; the total 606 Not, 2 | 94. Ut agitator: see the amusing letter to Atticus XIII. 607 Not, 2 | and this among them, are amusingly ridiculed, Pyrrh. Hyp. II. 608 Not, 2 | an answer is given) and αναβολη. Antiopam: of Pacuvius. 609 Not, 1 | in Cic. are explained as anacolutha by Madv. in a most important 610 Not, 2 | argumento: the sentence is anacoluthic, the broken thread is picked 611 Not, 1 | Off. I. 153. Schuppe, De Anacoluthis Ciceronianis p. 9, agrees 612 Not, 2 | Cogere: this word like αναγκαζειν and βιαζεσθαι often means 613 Int, IV | δεινος ανηρ, ταχα κεν και αναιτιον αιτιοωιτο.~So there often 614 Not, 2 | Ergo after vos is of course analeptic. Halm departs somewhat from 615 Not, 2 | the passages he quotes, "analogies" will here best translate 616 Not, 1 | other heat, the former being αναλογον τω των αστρων στοιχειω ( 617 Not, 2 | think our passage at all analogous to those he quotes, and 618 Not, 1 | δοξαστον and the επιστητον, e.g Analyt. Post. I. 33 (qu. R. and 619 Abbr | Corruptione; Anal. Post. = Analytica Posteriora; Met. = Metaphysica; 620 Not, 1 | tyrannus (De Rep. III. 45), and anapaestus (T.D. III. 57) Might we 621 Not, 2 | may be a mere φαντασμα or αναπλασμα της διανοιας, a phantom 622 Not, 2 | 184), κενοπαθηματα και αναπλασματα της διανοιας (ib. VIII. 623 Not, 2 | Top. 57. The προτος λογος αναποδεικτος of the Stoic logic ran thus 624 Not, 1 | the passive of perdere cf. αναστηναι, εκπιπτειν ‛υπο τινος.~§ 625 Not, 2 | Gorg. 481 C ‛ημων ‛ο βιος ανατετραμμενος αν ειη, Sext. A.M. VIII. 626 Not, 2 | conflicting schools of Thales, Anaximander, Anaximenos, Anaxagoras, 627 II, XXXVII | gignerentur. Post eius auditor Anaximenes infinitum aëra, sed ea, 628 Not, 2 | of Thales, Anaximander, Anaximenos, Anaxagoras, Xenophanes, 629 Not, 2 | prefer mine, to which our ancestors bear testimony.~§142. Venio 630 Not, 2 | tollere is used of weighing anchor, and Varro De Re Rust. III. 631 Not, 2 | reference to adsensus and ancora; in the first way we have 632 Not, 2 | senses, quoted the address of Andromache to Hector: δαιμονιε φθισει 633 Not, 2 | το τους του εχθρου παιδας ανελειν, ‛οπερ και εποιησεν. Cf. 634 Not, 2 | must, if consistent, be ανενεργητος εν βιωι (Sext. Pyrrh. Hyp. 635 Not, 2 | II. 31 of the πολλη και ανηνυτος μαχη concerning the soul. 636 Int, IV | but you know he is~δεινος ανηρ, ταχα κεν και αναιτιον αιτιοωιτο.~ 637 Not, 2 | IV. 71. Vibrat: with the ανηριθμον γελασμα of Aeschylus. Dissimileque: 638 Not, 2 | λευκην ειναι την χιονα, ανετιθει ‛οτι χιων εστιν ‛υδορ πεπηγος 639 I, IIII | p. 65. Natrices dicuntur angues natantes Cic. Academicorum 640 Not, 2 | twice. Caerulea ... angui: anguis fem is not uncommon in the 641 II, XXIX | parva, longa brevia, lata angusta, quanto aut addito aut dempto 642 II, XXXV | oratio, cur eam tantas in angustias et in Stoicorum dumeta compellimus? 643 I, X | sed eas contraherent in angustumque deducerent, hic omnibus 644 Not, 2 | in Homer. Relaxentur: cf. ανιεναι της οργης Aristoph. Ran. 645 II, X | hoc quidem vel maxime vos animadvertebam moveri—probabile aliquid 646 Not, 1 | edd., here = iudicavit not animadvertit cf. M.D.F. II. 6. Reperiebatur: 647 Abbr | Gen. An. = De Generatione Animalium; De Gen. et Corr. = De Generatione 648 Not, 2 | Cic. allows animus to all animals, not merely anima; see Madv. 649 Not, 2 | rule given by Forc. s.v. animans is therefore wrong. Temeritate: 650 Not, 2 | qu. Liv. XXXIII. 21, Tac. Ann. XIII. 40. Aut ludicros 651 Not, 2 | had restored the old lex annalis in all its rigour, and yet 652 II, V | qui exactis regibus primo anno consul fuit, commemorant 653 Int, IV | postponed till I come to annotate its actual text. The same 654 Not, 2 | simply means "tiresome," "annoying." Non comprehensa: as in 655 Not, 1 | Antecedat: some MSS. give antecellat. a frequent variant, cf. 656 I, VI | et multis vitae commodis anteponebantur. Haec quidem fuit apud eos 657 II, XXIII | quis hunc philosophum non anteponit Cleanthi, Chrysippo, reliquis 658 Int, I | which Caesar replied by his Anticato, were all finished within 659 Int, II | detail here would be to anticipate the text of the Lucullus 660 Int, IV | occur to Varro, and Cicero anticipates his wonder in the letter 661 Not, 2 | clearly forms part of those anticipatory sceptical arguments which 662 Not, 2 | 75), who give the name of αντιχθων to the opposite side of 663 Not, 1 | Xenocrates, tripping over the old αντιφασις of the One and the Many, 664 II, XLIV | est in bonis, tibi vero, Antioche, minime, cui praeter honestatem 665 Not, 2 | terms in the expositions of Antiocheanism found in Cic. Cf. I. 20.~§ 666 II, XXII | ii, qui se sequerentur, Antiochii vocarentur. Mihi autem magis 667 Not, 1 | the companion adjective Antiochius is frequent. Halm inserts 668 II, IX | nihil posse percipi. Sed Antipatro hoc idem postulanti, cum 669 II, VI | iis, qui nihil probarent, Antipatrumque Stoicum, qui multus in eo 670 Not, 2 | 63 A. The existence of αντιποδες; was of course bound up 671 Not, 2 | invented the name. The word αντιπους seems to occur first in 672 Not, 2 | probable that this spelling was antique in Cic.'s time and only 673 I, X | Cumque eas perturbationes antiqui naturalis esse dicerent 674 II, XXXVII | Xenophanes, paulo etiam antiquior, unum esse omnia neque id 675 Not, 1 | etc., which came down from antiquity, did not make Greek nouns 676 I, XII | nunc partes, inquit, qui ab antiquorum ratione desciscis et ea, 677 Not, 2 | ipsi quidem: even Socrates, Antisthenes and Diogenes were not σοφοι 678 Not, 1 | a trans. of Aristotle's αντιστροφος in the beginning of the 679 Not, 2 | μεγεθος εχειν ευρος ποδος ανθρωπειου, which is affirmed to be 680 Not, 1 | defined as αιτια αδηλος ανθρωπινωι λογισμωι (Stob. I. 7, 9, 681 Not, 2 | his famous line ‛αιμα γαρ ανθρωποις περικαρδιον εστι νοημα is 682 II, XVII | aut geminorum aut signorum anulis impressorum pueriliter consectantur. 683 Not, 1 | the αδιαφορα, nor is there anywhere in the numerous passages 684 Not, 2 | requires the perfect or aorist. Tot saeculis: cf. the same 685 Int, IV | ατριψια did not amount to απαιδευσια, or else Cicero could not 686 Not, 1 | αναγκαιον ειναι που το ‛ον ‛απαν εν τινι τοπω. For ancient 687 Not, 2 | εναντιουσθαι as Goer. says, but of απανταν, which occurs very frequently 688 Not, 2 | 181—189).~§34. Communitas: απαραλλαξια or επιμιξια των φαντασιων; 689 Not, 1 | αποπροηγμενα as τα ‛ικανην απαξιαν εχοντα (Adv. Math. XI. 62— 690 Not, 2 | Infinitatem naturae: το απειρον, naturae here = ουσιας. 691 Not, 2 | statues of Alexander, as Apelles alone was allowed to paint 692 II, XII | explicabamus, simul illud aperiebatur, comprehendi multa et percipi 693 Not, 1 | enough. Dav., Halm give aperirentur. There is no MSS. variant. 694 Not, 2 | και την πιθανην ‛αμα και απερισπαστον και διεξωδευμενην (R. and 695 Not, 2 | This last is only called απερισπαστος when examination has shown 696 II, VII | aut, ita qui sentiet non apertissime insaniat? 21. Atqui qualia 697 II, XIX | tu, cum res occultissimas aperueris in lucemque protuleris iuratusque 698 II, XXXIX | quorum intererat ea nosse, aperuerunt, ut viderentur. Nec eo tamen 699 I, III | genera, officia, causas aperuisti, plurimumque poetis nostris 700 II, XVII | sibi] sint et ova ovorum et apes apium simillimae: quid pugnas 701 Not, 1 | ortae: the Greek terms are ‛απλα and συνθετα, see Arist. 702 Not, 2 | defined in Greek as μηκος απλατες. (Sext. as above), (2) that 703 Not, 1 | πολυειδεις, which is opposed to ‛απλους in Plat. Phaedr. 238 A, 704 Not, 2 | slept off the effects," cf. αποβριζειν in Homer. Relaxentur: cf. 705 Not, 1 | ref. to those αρχαι της αποδειξεως of Arist. which, induced 706 Not, 1 | adhibenda etiam begins the apodosis. Madvig (Emendationes ad 707 Not, 1 | thing generated from the αποιος ‛υλη; from it comes air, 708 Not, 2 | so the εννοιαι are called αποκειμεναι νοησεις (Plut. De Sto. Repug. 709 Not, 2 | Relinquitur: so in Sext. απολειπειν is constantly used as the 710 II, XXVIII | cetera:~'Intendit crinitus Apollo~arcum auratum, luna innixus:~ 711 Not, 1 | quotes Ad Att. XII. 23, 2, ex Apollodori. Possibly the MSS. may be 712 Abbr | Tim. = Timaeus; Apol. = Apologia Socratis; Gorg. = Gorgias; 713 Not, 2 | Cat. Mai. §3 Cic. actually apologises for making Cato more learned 714 Pre | widely from the MSS. If any apology be needed for discussing, 715 Not, 2 | in later Gk. generally απολυειν. Erunt ... cavetis: this 716 Not, 2 | argument at all. Dissolvere: απολυεσθαι in Sext. Occurrere: cf. 717 Not, 2 | Aliquos: contemptuous; απονενοημενους τινας. Cf. Parad. 33 agrestis 718 Not, 2 | declarare? Inexplicabilia: απορα in the Greek writers. Odiosius: 719 Not, 1 | ητικον, ‛οι δε κατα μεν τι απορητικον, κατα δε τι δογματικον. 720 Int, II | looking upon Socrates as the apostle of doubt106. On the whole 721 Not, 2 | Carneades, that they were apostles of doubt, to be correct ( 722 Not, 2 | ποιητικη corresponds to the αποτ. of Sext. Continget: "will 723 Not, 2 | third class of τεχναι called αποτελεσματικαι to the usual θεωρητικαι 724 II, I | totiusque belli instrumento et apparatu, ut ille rex post Alexandrum 725 II, XVII | cum eae plurimis in rebus appareant? Sed, si satis est ad tollendam 726 Not, 1 | dogmatists and sceptics appealed, Sextus Pyrrhon. Hyp. I. 727 II, XXIII | hic sophistes?—sic enim appellabantur ii, qui ostentationis aut 728 II, XLIII | per ipsum Antiochum? qui appellabatur Academicus, erat quidem, 729 II, XLVII | XLVII. Quid ergo Academici appellamur? an abutimur gloria nominis? 730 II, VII | notitiae—εννοιας enim notitias appellare tu videbare—, si igitur 731 I, X | numeraret in bonis, idque appellaret honestum, quod esset simplex 732 II, XLII | Eretria fuit, Eretriaci appellati, quorum omne bonum in mente 733 Int, IV | so also is the frequent appellation Academici libri204. The 734 I, VII | Latinis. Qualitates igitur appellavi, quas ποιοτητας Graeci vocant, 735 II, XXVII | Iliona somno illo:~'Mater, te appello ...'~nonne ita credit filium 736 Int, II | natural theology must be, an appendage of physical science. The 737 Not, 2 | unless by such marks as can appertain to no other thing. How can 738 Int, IV | probabile had been handled appertains to Catulus. The exposition 739 II, VIII | modo autem moveri animus ad appetendum potest, si id, quod videtur, 740 II, XII | potest animal ullum non appetere id, quod accommodatum ad 741 Not, 1 | reducta, in D.F. III. 16 appeterent includes fugerent, ibid. 742 II, VIII | agendum impellimur, et id appetimus, quod est visum, moveri 743 Int, I | understood. In truth, his appetite for every kind of literature 744 Not, 2 | voluptatis alii putant primum appetitum. Voluptatem etc.: for the 745 Int, I | προπυλον at the Academia, as Appius, his predecessor, had done 746 II, XX | potissimum philosophiam me applicavi, non modo stultitiam meam, 747 II, XXVI | sensu profectum, cui non appositum sit visum aliud, quod ab 748 II, XLI | magis adsentiuntur neque approbant lucere nunc, quam, cum cornix 749 II, IX | cuiusquam esse potest nihil approbantis, sit, ut opinor, dictum 750 I, XII | falsa aut incognita res approbaretur, neque hoc quicquam esse 751 II, XLVI | adquiescis, adsentiris, approbas, verum illud certum, comprehensum, 752 Int, III | elder generation, for whose approbation he most cared, praised the 753 I, XII | perceptioni adsensionem approbationemque praecurrere. Huic rationi 754 I, XI | Sed, cum acceptum iam et approbatum esset, comprehensionem appellabat, 755 II, XX | qui nihil umquam falsi approbem, qui numquam adsentiar, 756 Not, 2 | describe himself as formally approving (comprobans). The practice 757 Int, II | logic112, and in ethics had approximated considerably to the Stoic 758 Int, IV | published, testify to this approximation300. Still they are all cold, 759 II, X | scientiam vitaeque constantiam aptissima cum sit mens hominis, amplectitur 760 Not, 1 | that iunctos could mean aptos (R. and P. 366) is untenable. 761 I, II | purpurascit: et quidem aquae tinctum quodam modo et infectum....~ 762 Not, 2 | lines are part of Cic.'s Aratea, and are quoted in N.D. 763 II, XX | Phoenices in alto,'~ut ait Aratus, eoque directius gubernant, 764 Not, 1 | with Cicero is the supreme arbiter of performance in philosophy, 765 II, II | minui, sed etiam augeri arbitramur eorum, quorum ad popularis 766 I, X | supra dixi, seiungi posse arbitrarentur, hic nec id ullo modo fieri 767 II, XXXII | Licet enim haec quivis arbitratu suo reprehendat, quod negemus 768 Int, IV | the latter of the negative Arcesilaean doctrines as would clear 769 II, XLI | refertis: huic me quasi malis architectis mensurae vestrae nego credere. 770 Not, 1 | Stob. Phys., entitled περι αρχων και στοιχειων και του παντος. 771 Not, 2 | strangely explains luna as = arcu ipso lunato, Dav. says we 772 II, XXVIII | incedunt, circumstant~cum ardentibus taedis.'~Num dubitas quin 773 II, XX | Iovem deosque penates me et ardere studio veri reperiendi et 774 II, XXXVII | aliquando ut omnis hic mundus ardore deflagret.~ 775 Not, 1 | παντος του βιου χρησθαι ταις αρεταις, το δε των φαυλων ταις κακιαις. 776 Not, 2 | D.F. II. 51, Val. Flaccus Argon. II. 547, add Virg. Aen. 777 II, XV | Exponam igitur generatim argumenta eorum, quoniam ipsi etiam 778 Not, 1 | scholars alter it, e.g. Bentl. argumentatione, Ernesti ratione. But the 779 II, X | vocant. Eo cum accessit ratio argumentique conclusio rerumque innumerabilium 780 Not, 2 | by what Dav. calls an "arguta hariolatio," read an for 781 I, II | Nonius p. 394. Siccum dicitur aridum et sine humore ... Siccum 782 Not, 2 | the reading lacerat would arise at once. The nom. to dicit 783 Not, 2 | superabundance of negation arising from a sort of anacoluthon, 784 Not, 2 | speaks of the followers of Aristarchus the mathematician as holding 785 Not, 2 | eo: cf. Horace's nunc in Aristippi furtim praecepta relabor, 786 II, XLV | ut adsentiar Epicuro aut Aristippo. Revocat virtus vel potius 787 Not, 2 | and claims to follow the aristocracy of philosophy. The attempts 788 Not, 2 | Democr. was literally an aristocrat have failed. Convicio: cf. 789 I, IV | Stagiritem, qui erant cum Aristotele, Peripatetici dicti sunt, 790 II, XV | quibus iam diximus, et esse armatos, ut occurrere possimus interrogationibus 791 II, XXVII | inferiorem fuisse, itaque ab eo armatum esse Carneadem.—88. Ea sunt 792 Int, II | that his one aim was to arouse men to the investigation 793 Int, IV | in order, as he says, to arrange some business matters, and 794 Int, IV | first thing he did on his arrival was to transfer the parts 795 Not, 2 | senses, and so gradually arrives at virtue, which is the 796 Int, II | that it should avoid this arrogance73. Philosophers of the highest 797 Int, II | a case. It seemed to him arrogant to make any proposition 798 Not, 2 | exception to the general arrogantia of the physici. Empedocles 799 Not, 1 | audiissemus. Confestim: note how artfully Cic. uses the dramatic form 800 II, XXVII | te valere, si sine magnis artificiis, ad quae pauci accedunt, 801 II, XVI | bona et artificiosis minime artificiosa: quid dubitamus igitur adfirmare 802 II, XVI | honesta et bonis non bona et artificiosis minime artificiosa: quid 803 Not, 2 | order of course that the artisans might all be at the meeting, 804 Not, 2 | Myrmecides: an actual Athenian artist, famed for minute work in 805 Int, IV | History as the patron of Greek artists. Yet, as we have already 806 Int, I | period was Antiochus of Ascalon, now the representative 807 Int, III | to strike a blow at the ascendency of Epicureanism throughout 808 Int, IV | but employed Atticus to ascertain his feeling about the dedication187.~ 809 II, XLV | ad opinionem et aliquid asciscam et comprobem incognitum, 810 II, XL | irrumpere? Tu vero ista ne asciveris neve fueris commenticiis 811 Not, 2 | implements." Formerly I conj. ascra, or atque in, which last 812 Not, 1 | where the same definition is ascribed to Anaxagoras—see also Topica, 813 Not, 1 | καταληπτικαι φαντασιαι were ασφαλεις, αμεταπτωτοι ‛υπο λογου. 814 Not, 2 | he half confesses himself ashamed in D.F. IV. 74. Exsules 815 II, VII | illud, hoc bene olens, hoc asperum.' Animo iam haec tenemus 816 Not, 1 | time. On the tendency to aspirate even native Latin words 817 Not, 2 | belonged to the preliminary assault on the senses made by Cic. 818 Not, 2 | editions. The result of these assaults on the senses must have 819 Not, 1 | the conj. of Ciaconus "ex asse heredem, secundos autem" 820 Not, 2 | Assentati: here simply = assensi. Praeteritis: here used 821 Not, 1 | quadam impulsione et ex assensu animorum, but having to 822 Not, 2 | Sext. A.M. VIII. 430.~§45. Assentati: here simply = assensi. 823 II, XLIII | igitur me, ne incognito assentiar: quod mihi tecum est dogma 824 Not, 2 | prudentior: MSS. generally have assentiens, but one good one (Halm' 825 Not, 2 | good one (Halm's E) has assentientes. I venture to read adsentietur, 826 Not, 2 | be so the mere habit of assenting is full of peril. Still, 827 Not, 1 | essent; thus making Antiochus assert that no true information 828 I, Inc | hunc locum verbis perspicue asseverat Augustinus haec ipsius esse 829 Not, 2 | You must be prepared to asseverate no less strongly that the 830 Not, 2 | cogere in 116. Ne ille: this asseverative ne is thus always closely 831 Not, 1 | and passive. The Stoics assign only one property to each 832 Not, 1 | always guards himself from assigning a material origin to mind. 833 Int, IV | refused to take a general assurance, and anxiously asked for 834 Not, 2 | Ulla communitas: I am astonished to find Bait. returning 835 Int, IV | so may be seen from the astounding theories which old scholars 836 I, VII | Quintum genus, e quo essent astra mentesque, singulare eorumque 837 Not, 2 | many edd. have gone far astray in interpreting this passage. 838 Not, 1 | former being αναλογον τω των αστρων στοιχειω (De Gen. An. II. 839 Not, 2 | Sext. who generally uses αταραξια, but occasionally μετριοπαθεια; 840 Not, 2 | VIII. 280 ου διοισει της ατεχνιας ‛η τεχνη. Sextus often comments 841 Not, 2 | proverb used like γλαυκ' εσ' Αθηνας and "coals to Newcastle," 842 Not, 1 | and less accurately by Athenaeus, VII. 279 (qu. R. and P. 843 Not, 2 | Fratrem II. 13, 1 risi nivem atram ... teque hilari animo esse 844 Not, 2 | killing, as he thinks, the Atridae, keeps Odysseus alive awhile 845 II, XLIV | secusne alias viderimus. 136. Atrocitas quidem ista tua quo modo 846 Int, IV | lix] the East he sought to attach learned men to his person. 847 Int, II | importance was in Cicero's time attached to this branch of philosophy. 848 Not, 2 | against the absurdity of attaching one and the same degree 849 Not, 1 | in order to magnify his attachment for Varro. Ab eius villa: 850 Int, IV | defends the Greeks from the attacks of Crassus232. He contemptuously 851 Not, 2 | during his earlier years to attain to glory in the forum (1). 852 Not, 2 | will be delighted if he attains to anything which seems 853 Int, IV | to avoid the embarrassing attentions of Brutus167. Before leaving 854 Abbr | Brutus; Ad Att. = Ad Atticum; Ad Fam. = Ad Familiares; 855 II, XII | disputatum est, vera sunt, nihil attinet de adsensione omnino loqui. 856 II, XXXI | Et quaecumque res eum sic attinget, ut sit visum illud probabile 857 Int, II | there was in such a tenet to attract Cicero. Nothing was more 858 Not, 1 | according to his different attributes, the names God, Soul, Reason, 859 Not, 1 | ablative, and some verb like attulisset is omitted. (So Turnebus.) 860 I, III | litteris luminis et verbis attulisti, atque ipse varium et elegans 861 II, VIII | quaerendi initium ratio attulit, quae perfecit virtutem, 862 Not, 1 | implies no more than the Germ. auch nicht, cf. also Gk. ουδε. 863 Not, 2 | Carneades non ille quidem auctor sed defensor disserendi 864 II, V | Scaevolam, aiunt Ti. Graccho auctores legum fuisse, alterum quidem, 865 II, XXIV | quodam modo.~Satis multa de auctoribus. Quamquam ex me quaesieras 866 I, IX | primi Platonis rationem auctoritatemque susceperant, et post eos 867 I, III | depugnare cum facinorosis et audacibus, quis non cum miserrimum, 868 Not, 1 | veteres: the statement is audaciously inexact, and is criticised 869 II, XXV | longius. Responderem igitur audacter isti vestro deo me plane 870 II, XXIII | cum sciri nihil possit, audeant se scire dicere. Et ab iis 871 I, VII | fecisti, sed etiam verborum. Audebimus ergo, inquit, novis verbis 872 II, VIII | aliquam rem aut agere fidenter audebit, cum certi nihil erit quod 873 Not, 1 | concedendum qui ea nunc primum audemus attingere.~§26. Non modo 874 I, I | iam diu exspectans, non audeo tamen flagitare: audivi 875 II, XLVI | et alia innumerabilia cum audiam, moveri? Tam moveor quam 876 II, II | quam ante dixi, ea saepe audiendo facile cognovit, quae vel 877 II, IV | Cum ita esset exorsus, ad audiendum animos ereximus. 11. At 878 II, XVIII | sententiam vestram? Ut, qui audient, inquit, ratione potius 879 Not, 2 | ageretur with Dav., Bait. audiet, egerit. Ex hoc loco video ... 880 Not, 1 | intermediate forms like audiissemus. Confestim: note how artfully 881 I, IV | ipso quid est, inquit, quod audio? Quanam, inquam, de re? 882 II, IV | cum Heraclitum studiose audirem contra Antiochum disserentem 883 II, XXII | quam ipse coepit qui se audirent habere. 70. Unde autem subito 884 II, XXXII | nihil igitur cernis? nihil audis? nihil tibi est perspicuum?' 885 Not, 2 | bonis: Dav. qu. Plut. De Audit. 45 A, μεμψαιτο δ' αν τις 886 II, III | potuerunt omnibus rebus auditis, cognitis etiam reliquorum 887 Not, 2 | however read fautorem, Dav. auditorem.~§6. Illigari: "entangled" 888 II, XXXIX | aspernor, quam iis, qui, cum audiunt, desipere vos arbitrantur? 889 I, IX | tuebantur. Iam Polemonem audiverant adsidue Zeno et Arcesilas. 890 II, IV | Philone vel ex ullo Academico audivisset aliquando? Negabat. Philonis 891 II, II | modo non minui, sed etiam augeri arbitramur eorum, quorum 892 Not, 1 | for ne ... quidem is post Augustan Latin. Christ supposes some 893 I, Inc | verbis perspicue asseverat Augustinus haec ipsius esse Ciceronis 894 II, VII | oculi pictura teneantur, aures cantibus, quis est quin 895 Not, 2 | non mortalia pectora cogis auri sacra fames? Sapientem nec 896 Not, 2 | προβολην pugilis et retentionem aurigae similem facit εποχη. Aug. 897 Not, 2 | on Lucr. II. 51 fulgor ab auro. Possit: for the om. of 898 II, XXXIII | esse haruspicum [responsa], auspicia, oracula, somnia, vaticinationes, 899 II, XV | videantur quaeque oraculis, auspiciis, extis declarentur—haec 900 Abbr | Corss. = Corssen; Ausspr. = Aussprache, Vokalismus und Betonung.~ 901 II, XXIII | etiam animi? qui ita sit ausus ordiri: 'Haec loquor de 902 Not, 1 | dialogues as though they were authentic reports of Socratic conversations, 903 Int, IV | sought to point out as his authorised edition the one in four 904 I, VII | eos non modo copia rerum auxeris, uti fecisti, sed etiam 905 II, XV | evidentibus rebus adversentur, auxilia totidem sunt contra comparanda. 906 II, XXVIII | fidem implorat:~'Fer mi auxilium, pestem abige a me, flammiferam~ 907 I, II | Academicis lib. II.: frangere avaritiam, scelera ponere, vitam suam 908 Int, IV | Tullia's death entertained an aversion for Tusculum, where she 909 II, XXV | at familiarem nostrum C. Avianium, fortasse in porticu Neptuni 910 II, XLV | praetor esset, eum, qui cum avo tuo, Luculle, consul fuit, 911 Not, 1 | The ambiguity is sometimes avoided by the immediate succession 912 Not, 1 | there is no possibility of avoiding it in reading. I venture 913 Int, IV | give Varro the books? I await his judgment upon them, 914 Not, 2 | and pointing out that when awake Ennius did not assent to 915 Int, II | and that Cicero was well aware of the fact.~Very few words 916 Not, 2 | Atridae, keeps Odysseus alive awhile in order to torture him. 917 Not, 2 | account of the somewhat awkward constr. Lamb. read antiquos 918 Not, 2 | But the se comes in very awkwardly, and is not needed before 919 II, XXXIX | moveri: quae cum circum axem se summa celeritate convertat 920 Not, 2 | Momenta = aestimationes, αξιαι in 36, where momenti is 921 Not, 2 | Illud est album: these are αξιωματα, judgments of the mind, 922 Not, 1 | question whether αρετη was αυταρκες προς ευδαιμονιαν was one 923 Not, 2 | γουν τουτου σμικρωι τινι αυτωι τουτωι σοφωτερος ειναι, ‛ 924 Not, 1 | Aristotle about τυχη and το αυτοματον, also ch. 8—9 for αναγκη. 925 Not, 2 | επι τη φυσει των πραγματων αυτων καταλ.). But Arcesilas and 926 Not, 2 | who succeeded Diogenes Babylonius in the headship of the school. 927 Not, 2 | melius (sc. par) cum Bitho Bacchius. Si sequare, ruunt: for 928 Not, 2 | umbra and lumen, to denote background and foreground, so in Gk. 929 Int, IV | little place on the gulf of Baiae, close to Cimmerium, round 930 Not, 1 | Knowledge, first printed in Bain's Mental and Moral Science, 931 Not, 1 | inserts munera to keep the balance of the clauses. Cic. however 932 Int, II | giving an uncertain sound (balbutire) and to allow that the happiness 933 I, IIII | dictus, Stoicus perpauca balbuttiens. = Lucullus §135.~ 934 I, IIII | 123.~31. Nonius p. 80. Balbuttire est cum quadam linguae haesitatione 935 Not, 2 | squire of low degree" in the ballad. De opera publica detrahamus: 936 Int, IV | more compliments had been bandied about, most of [xlviii] 937 Int, II | warning example, and the baneful effects of authority are 938 Not, 2 | comprehendi: Halm retains the barbarous ac of the MSS. before the 939 Int, IV | need only imply such a bare statement on the part of 940 Int, I | open to an orator was now barred.10~We thus see that before 941 Int, II | allured Cicero more than the barrenness of the Stoic dialectic repelled 942 Not, 1 | 325, 377. The diphthong bars the old derivations from 943 Not, 1 | II. 86 the opposite of beata vita is abruptly introduced. 944 I, V | quae non tam naturae quam beatae vitae adiuncta sunt. Hominem 945 Not, 1 | Cic. N.D. I. 95 suggests beatitas and beatitudo but does not 946 Not, 1 | 95 suggests beatitas and beatitudo but does not elsewhere employ 947 Int, II | indifferent to every adornment and beauty of language. ~ 948 Not, 2 | R. and P. 367. Stabilem: βεβαιον και αμεταπτωτου. Artem vivendi: " 949 Not, 2 | ship which the wings of a bee concealed. See Plin. Nat. 950 Not, 2 | absurdly say, "to learn beforehand, i.e. to learn thoroughly." 951 Int, I | to the matter in hand, I beg all students to free themselves 952 Int, IV | passed into his hands, Cicero begged him to take all precautions 953 Not, 2 | Corss. Ausspr. II. 851); Beier on De Off. I. p. 157 (qu. 954 Int, I | philosophy, law, rhetoric, and belles lettres. Many ambitious 955 Not, 1 | bellicam: opposed like domi bellique, cf. Brut. 49, De Off. I. 956 II, XLV | voluptate tamquam hominem cum belua copulabis?~ 957 II, XXXIV | quod, ut feram et immanem beluam, sic ex animis nostris adsensionem, 958 Not, 1 | the World God is perfectly beneficent, see Ac. II. 120, N.D. I. 959 Int, IV | the first few weeks of his bereavement138. It was his wont to depend 960 Not, 1 | or nomina as rerum notae. Berkley's nodis for notis has no 961 Not, 2 | Cf. Ad Att. as above.)~ ~Besides the actual fragments of 962 Int, IV | task. Thus the commendation bestowed by Lucullus on the way in 963 Int, IV | rhetorical teaching, while he bestows [xlix] high commendation 964 Abbr | Aussprache, Vokalismus und Betonung.~Curt. = Curtius; Grundz. = 965 Int, IV | De Finibus was already "betrothed" to Brutus, he promised 966 Not, 2 | word like αναγκαζειν and βιαζεσθαι often means simply to argue 967 Not, 2 | tents, O Israel" in the Bible. Artificia: n. on 30. Tolli: 968 Int, IV | the death of Tullia, by bidding him remember "Catulus and 969 Not, 2 | same meaning as an adj. in -bilis. Faber points out that in 970 Not, 2 | about the legal effect the bills would have. Ut videmus ... 971 Int, IV | nothing could surpass190." The binding and adornment of the presentation 972 Int, IV | much for historical and biographical details, and in the letter 973 Not, 2 | consistent, be ανενεργητος εν βιωι (Sext. Pyrrh. Hyp. I. 23). 974 Not, 1 | σπουδαιων δια παντος του βιου χρησθαι ταις αρεταις, το 975 Not, 2 | pedalem magnitudinem et bipedalem". (D.F. I. 20) This explanation 976 Int, IV | Lucullus, though of noble birth, had no claim to learning175. 977 Not, 2 | to be gathered from the bishop's works. In Aug. Contr. 978 Not, 2 | compositum melius (sc. par) cum Bitho Bacchius. Si sequare, ruunt: 979 Int, I | to his teaching. He was biting and sarcastic in speech, 980 Not, 2 | remains that it may be really black? Again, how can a thing 981 II, XLV | voluptas sensibus nostris blandiatur. Labor eo, ut adsentiar 982 Int, III | readers, and the voluptuous blandishments of pleasure. This last cause, 983 Not, 2 | Dav. conjectured comically blaterat iste tamen et, Halm lacera 984 Not, 2 | Communi loco: τοπω, that of blinking facts which cannot be disproved, 985 Not, 2 | M.D.F. V. 12) made gross blunders about them, the supposition 986 Int, I | sufficient to justify his boast that at no time had he been 987 Int, I | Rome, as he not unjustly boasts12. For two years he was 988 Not, 2 | sound. Trans. "whatever body is pushed, gives way." Tam 989 Not, 1 | esse mundo valentius?), Boethus quoted in Zeller 159. A 990 Int, II | however, this philosophic bohemianism, Cicero indignantly repels 991 Not, 2 | he says, "laudem habet bonae et copiosae memoriae" (on 992 Not, 2 | cf. also Orat. 59 vocis bonitas optanda est, non est enim 993 Not, 2 | Lucilius sustineat currum ut bonu' saepe agitator equosque, 994 Int, IV | the lost dialogue which bore his name he had argued against 995 Not, 1 | Anteiret aetate: Arcesilas was born about 315, Zeno about 350, 996 Int, IV | that philosopher may have borrowed from Zeno. The rôle given 997 Not, 1 | even native Latin words see Boscher in Curtius' Studien II. 998 Not, 2 | προβατιου βιον λεγεις and βοσκηματων βιος in Aristotle. The meaning 999 Not, 2 | The dogmatists say they bow to the authority of the 1000 Int, I | of eloquence, to the two boys Marcus and Quintus, who 1001 Not, 2 | perhaps the most extensive bracketer of modern times, rejects 1002 Not, 1 | and Baiter to be wrong in bracketing the words. Ea a: Lamb., 1003 Not, 2 | and the frequent use of βραδυς in Sext., e.g. A.M. VII. 1004 Not, 1 | named to account for the branching off from Plato of the later 1005 Int, II | dares not stir a foot's breadth away from Chrysippus86. 1006 Not, 2 | 128 at paulum ante. Such breaks often occur in Cic., as