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Marcus Tullius Cicero Academica Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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4044 II, XLV | iungit deo. Possum esse medius, ut, quoniam Aristippus, 4045 Int, II | Arcesilas and Carneades; the medley of Academicism, Peripateticism, 4046 Int, II | with all gentleness and meekness75. In positiveness of assertion 4047 II, XLII | Euclides, Socratis discipulus, Megareus, a quo iidem illi Megarici 4048 Not, 2 | imperatores. Stilponem, etc.: Megarians, see R. and P. 177—182. 4049 II, XLII | Megareus, a quo iidem illi Megarici dicti, qui id bonum solum 4050 II, IV | malim quam vincere. Sed mehercule, ut quidem nunc se causa 4051 Not, 2 | εστι μελαν και ‛η χιων αρα μελαινα." There is an obscure joke 4052 Not, 2 | πεπηγος το δε ‛υδορ εστι μελαν και ‛η χιων αρα μελαινα." 4053 II, VI | Charmada eloquentiae, in Melanthio Rhodio suavitatis. Bene 4054 Int, IV | Splendidiora, breviora, [xliii] meliora." Still, on every occasion 4055 Not, 2 | T.D. III. 4. Tractabit: μελλει μεταχειριζεσθαι.~§23. Cognitio: 4056 Not, 2 | connecting particle between the members of each pair, cf. 29, 125, 4057 Not, 2 | μετρον ανθρωπος hold that the μεμηνως is the κριτηριον των εν 4058 Int, I | He wished to leave some memorial of himself at the beautiful 4059 Not, 2 | qu. Plut. De Audit. 45 A, μεμψαιτο δ' αν τις Παρμενιδου την 4060 II, XLVIII | oculorum sensuumque reliquorum mendaciis et de sorite aut pseudomeno, 4061 II, XXV | visas: opinionis enim esse mendacium, non oculorum. Quasi quaeratur 4062 Not, 2 | Zeno of Elea, Euclides, Menedemus, Aristo, Pyrrho, Aristippus, 4063 I, I | quid autem stomachatur Menesarchus? quid Antipater digladiatur 4064 Not, 1 | Considerable fragments of Varro's Menippean Satires remain, and have 4065 Not, 2 | δαιμονιε φθισει σε το σον μενος. From Diog. IV. 62 we learn 4066 II, XLI | adfirmabunt signum illud, si erunt mensi, sex pedum esse quam solem, 4067 II, XLI | quasi malis architectis mensurae vestrae nego credere. Ergo 4068 II, XXVII | artificio esset sensus nostros mentemque et totam constructionem 4069 I, VII | genus, e quo essent astra mentesque, singulare eorumque quattuor, 4070 Not, 2 | Latina non est, sed sanae menti repugnat." For the proceeding 4071 II, XLI | ac monet ut crebro faciam mentionem sui—vos ergo huius magnitudinem 4072 II, V | Et de hoc quidem nihil mentiuntur. Horum nominibus tot virorum 4073 I, V | amo nostra atque nostros, meque ista delectant, cum Latine 4074 I, I | LIBRO I.~1. Nonius p. 65 Merc. Digladiari dictum est dissentire 4075 II, XLVI | Nam quae voluptate quasi mercede aliqua ad officium impellitur, 4076 II, XXX | dialecticam didicerat: haec autem merces erat dialecticorum. Sequor 4077 Not, 2 | 85) Can you find a ring merchant to rival your chicken rearer 4078 Not, 1 | in Plato; Varro seems to merge the two last divisions into 4079 Not, 2 | that the two sensations are merged into one, but merely that 4080 Not, 2 | Cic.'s translation, which merges φως and ‛ημερα into one 4081 Not, 1 | recte: for the et cf. et merito, which begins one of Propertius' 4082 I, VII | inquam, Varro, bene etiam meriturus mihi videris de tuis civibus, 4083 Not, 1 | half a page back had made merry over the gloss hunters, 4084 Not, 1 | The word media is the Gk. μεσα, which word however is not 4085 Not, 2 | dictata. Mediocritates: μεσοπετες, as in Aristotle; cf. T. 4086 Not, 2 | Gk. with ‛ομοιον, μεταξυ, μεσος, and such words. Eodem caelo 4087 Not, 1 | 37, about Heraclitus, εν μεταβολη γαρ συνεχει τα οντα. Laberentur 4088 Not, 2 | III. 4. Tractabit: μελλει μεταχειριζεσθαι.~§23. Cognitio: like Germ. 4089 Not, 1 | Transferenda: transferre = μεταφερειν, which is technically used 4090 Not, 2 | Refero: "retort," as in Ovid. Metam. I. 758 pudet haec opprobria 4091 Not, 1 | 49 E, 50 A, also Arist. Metaph H, 1, R. and P. 270—274). 4092 Abbr | Analytica Posteriora; Met. = Metaphysica; Phys. = Physica.~Plut. = 4093 Not, 2 | of Dionysius (called ‛ο μεταθεμενος) from Stoicism to Epicureanism 4094 Not, 2 | the persistent enemy of Metellus Numidicus, who was the uncle 4095 II, XLI | pedum esse quam solem, quem metiri non possunt, plus quam duodeviginti 4096 Not, 1 | επιστημην και δοξαν και την εν μεθοπιαι τουτων καταληψιν. Soli: 4097 Not, 1 | own rules about admitting metre in prose, Orator 194 sq., 4098 Not, 2 | αταραξια, but occasionally μετριοπαθεια; cf. Zeller 496, R. and 4099 II, XXIV | Clitomacho plus quam Philoni aut Metrodoro credens, hoc magis ab eo 4100 Not, 2 | with his doctrine παντων μετρον ανθρωπος hold that the μεμηνως 4101 II, XLIV | videntur, quae et venientia metuat sapiens necesse est et venisse 4102 II, XXXIV | probabilibus. Itaque non metuit ne confundere omnia videatur 4103 II, XLIV | istas animis nostris datas: metum cavendi causa, misericordiam 4104 II, XLIII | copioseque dicente. Et hic metuo ne vix sibi constet, qui 4105 | meum 4106 II, XXVIII | virginis fidem implorat:~'Fer mi auxilium, pestem abige a 4107 Not, 1 | καθαλου would naturally seem microscopic to Antiochus. Both theories 4108 Not, 2 | firmly fixed or hovers in mid air (122). Xenophanes, Hicetas, 4109 Not, 2 | Newcastle," see Lorenz on Plaut. Miles II. 2, 38, and cf. Ad Att. 4110 Int, II | thinkers from Milton to Mill, to show that the free conflict 4111 II, XXV | scholis nominari solet, mille et octingenta stadia quod 4112 II, XXX | conclusi, teneo: sin vitiose, minam Diogenes reddet.' Ab eo 4113 Not, 2 | minutiores. I conj. nimio minares, which would be much nearer 4114 I, XII | dixisset: Breviter sane minimeque obscure exposita est, inquam, 4115 II, XX | condemnandam puto. Nam, si in minimis rebus pertinacia reprehenditur, 4116 II, XIX | pulcherrimarum a te ipso minuatur auctoritas. Quae cum dixisset 4117 Not, 2 | Halm for MSS. augendi nec minuendi, which Bait. retains. I 4118 II, II | laudes has etiam minus notas minusque pervolgatas adiungimus. 4119 II, XLI | dicere aliud alio magis minusve comprehendi, quoniam omnium 4120 II, XXXVII | particulas, similis inter se, minutas, eas primum confusas, postea 4121 Not, 2 | his minores, Durand sed minutior, while Halm suggests sed 4122 Not, 2 | while Halm suggests sed minutiores. I conj. nimio minares, 4123 II, XIII | universa concidunt etiam minutius. Ut enim de sensibus hesterno 4124 II, XXXVIII | deos Myrmecides aliquis minutorum opusculorum fabricator fuisse 4125 II, IV | stomachari tamen coepit. Mirabar: nec enim umquam ante videram. 4126 I, XII | unum tamen praeter ceteros mirabatur, incredibili quadam fuit 4127 Int, IV | eulogy to read, adding "Mirabiliter moratus est, sicut nosti, 4128 II, I | superiorum. 2. Idque eo fuit mirabilius, quod ab eo laus imperatoria 4129 II, XIX | cesseris, non magno opere mirabor. Memini enim Antiochum ipsum, 4130 Not, 2 | 66. Somnia: so N.D. I. 18 miracula non disserentium philosophorum 4131 Not, 1 | here himself scented a miserable gloss; Schutz, Goerenz's 4132 Not, 1 | editors stumble (Goerenz miserably) by taking intervallo of 4133 Not, 1 | enodandis nominibus quod miserandum sit laboratis). Post argumentis 4134 II, XLIV | datas: metum cavendi causa, misericordiam aegritudinemque clementiae, 4135 I, III | audacibus, quis non cum miserrimum, tum etiam stultissimum 4136 Int, III | For Cicero idleness was misery, and in those evil times 4137 I, III | De gloria librum ad te misi: at in eo prooemium id est, 4138 Not, 2 | undisputed," therefore, is a misleading trans. of the term. The 4139 Not, 2 | here was called Strabo—a misnomer surely. Octingenta: so the 4140 Not, 2 | little farther on, has got misplaced. Non id agitur: these difficulties 4141 Not, 2 | Bait. possibly by a mere misprint reads iratus. Comperisse: 4142 Int, IV | charging Philo with wilful misrepresentation of the older Academics250. 4143 Int, I | to leave Athens amid the misrule of the thirty tyrants61. 4144 Not, 2 | phenomenal difference, and so misses his mark; cf. n. on 50. 4145 II, I | ad Mithridaticum bellum missus a senatu non modo opinionem 4146 Not, 2 | system like yours free from mistakes (114). You wish me to join 4147 Not, 2 | impossible to guard against mistaking the one for the other, the 4148 Not, 2 | who looking at Electra, mistook her for an Erinys. The φαντασια 4149 Int, II | himself and others of the mists of error87. This spirit 4150 Not, 1 | that Cic. could so utterly misunderstand one of the cardinal and 4151 Not, 1 | accusing Sextus and Stobaeus of misunderstanding the Stoics as there is for 4152 Not, 2 | κατασκευη και παρασκευη. Rex: Mithridates. Quos legisset: = de quibus 4153 II, I | Quin etiam, cum victor a Mithridatico bello revertisset, inimicorum 4154 II, I | ingenium cognoscerent. Post ad Mithridaticum bellum missus a senatu non 4155 II, IV | enim poterat fieri illo mitius—stomachari tamen coepit. 4156 II, XV | inquiunt, visa quaedam mitti a deo, velut ea, quae in 4157 I, II | est studium, in Graeciam mitto, id est, ad Graecos ire 4158 Int, I | time he was resident at Mitylene, where Cicero seems to have 4159 Not, 1 | I believe that we have a mixture here of Antiochus' real 4160 Not, 2 | συνεσεως τε δει και μνημης. Ille deinceps: deinceps 4161 Not, 2 | 46 ed. Nobbe. The word is mocked in 109. Decretum: of course 4162 Not, 2 | sense cf. Sext. P.H. II. 209 μοχθηρους ‛ορους ειναι τους περιεχοντας 4163 II, XXXVII | ipsum fabricata sit et omnia moderetur, moveat, regat. Erit ei 4164 Not, 1 | one might almost add, with moderns too). Its importance to 4165 Not, 2 | ed. 4. Censuerim: more modest than censeo, see Madv. Gram. 4166 Not, 1 | and ibid. II. 73 pudor modestia pudicitia are said coerceri, 4167 Not, 2 | aliquam rem," will require modification. Species et quasdam formas: 4168 Not, 2 | connects clauses and does not modify hodie. On this subject see 4169 I, VII | accipere possit omnibusque modis mutari atque ex omni parte, 4170 Not, 2 | Primum ... modum: the word modus is technical in this sense 4171 II, XLIV | tam sunt defendenda quam moenia: mihi autem bono modo, tantum 4172 II, XLVIII | 148. Tum Lucullus: Non moleste, inquit, fero nos haec contulisse. 4173 II, XXIX | igitur eos, si potestis, ne molesti sint. Erunt enim, nisi cavetis. 4174 II, XXIV | nisi nobilem? Atqui habebam molestos vobis, sed minutos, Stilponem, 4175 II, VII | animo rem cernat, aliud, ut moliatur aliquid et faciat, quo modo 4176 II, XXXVIII | queat motus mutationemque moliri, nulla senectus diuturnitate 4177 Int, III | doctrines had undergone a momentous change, which ultimately 4178 Not, 2 | to talk about the saner moments of such people; the question 4179 Int, I | instance the illustrious Mommsen, who speaks of the De Legibus 4180 Not, 2 | entire: αισθησεσι μεν ουν μοναις λαβειν ταληθες (which resides 4181 Not, 1 | not monimentis (Halm) or monementis, is probably the right spelling; 4182 II, XIX | minorem natu, non dubitabo monere: Tune, cum tantis laudibus 4183 Not, 1 | Monumentis: this, and not monimentis (Halm) or monementis, is 4184 Not, 1 | and often. Plato uses also μονοειδης for unius modi; cf. Cic. 4185 Not, 2 | These arguments are called μονολημματοι (involving only one premise) 4186 Not, 2 | asserts that tantum non = μονον ου occurs nowhere else in 4187 Int, I | eloquence," was then the monopoly of the Stoic school. For 4188 Not, 2 | III. 23, 12. Portenta: "monstrosities these," cf. D.F. IV. 70. 4189 Not, 2 | upbraid me for believing such monstrous falsehoods (125). The Stoics 4190 Int, I | rhetoricians. The first six months passed at Athens, and were 4191 II, XXXIX | terram multarum urbium et montium. Portenta videntur, sed 4192 Not, 2 | the instrument. Mandare monum.: cf. I. 3. Insculptas: 4193 Not, 2 | usually identified with the moon, has led edd. to emend this 4194 Abbr | Ethics; Mag. Mor. = Magna Moralia; De Gen. An. = De Generatione 4195 Not, 1 | defined, he regarded as morally neither right nor wrong 4196 I, I | Quod cum audissemus, nullam moram interponendam putavimus 4197 I, X | deducerent, hic omnibus his quasi morbis voluit carere sapientem. 4198 I, III | adfixa.~18. Nonius p. 139. Mordicibus et mordicus pro morsu, pro 4199 I, Inc | illis (i.e. Academicis) morem fuisse occultandi sententiam 4200 Not, 1 | forma above, the ειδος or μορφη of Arist. Omnibus without 4201 Not, 2 | reads inverecundior after Morgenstern, for what reason it is difficult 4202 I, III | mordicus pro morsu, pro morsibus ... Cic. Academicorum lib. 4203 I, III | Mordicibus et mordicus pro morsu, pro morsibus ... Cic. Academicorum 4204 Not, 2 | Virg. Aen. III. 56 quid non mortalia pectora cogis auri sacra 4205 II, XXXVIII | viperarumque fecerit? cur mortifera tam multa ac perniciosa 4206 Not, 1 | 8, 11, 24, 57, 82. Quasi mortis: a trans. of Stoic παθεσι, 4207 II, XVI | videbar somniare med ego esse mortuum.'~Itaque, simul ut experrecti 4208 II, XIX | mecum, paulo ante quam est mortuus. Sed iam confirmata causa 4209 Not, 2 | Halm and Bait., follow Moser in writing Quid? si quae 4210 Not, 2 | be drunk," as in Plaut. Mostellaria I. 4, 6. Non diceret: Orelli 4211 Not, 2 | in 24. Appetitio pulsa: = mota, set in motion. For ‛ορμη 4212 II, XXXVIII | esse docet ponderibus et motibus. Ne ille et deum opere magno 4213 Not, 1 | Notionibus: so one MS. for motionibus which the rest have. Notio 4214 II, XV | exalbescerent vel ipsi per se motu mentis aliquo vel obiecta 4215 Not, 1 | Off. III. 69); efficta, moulded as by a potter (see II. 4216 Not, 2 | utterance, the former the moulding and shaping of the utterance 4217 Int, IV | therefore, is merely the mouthpiece of the father, just as Lucullus, 4218 Not, 2 | which was constantly in the mouths of sceptics, see e.g. Sext. 4219 Not, 1 | and is ever thus on the move." Ultro citroque is an odd 4220 II, XIX | censuerim, ut eius auctoritate moveare. Tantum enim non te modo 4221 II, XX | Auctoritas autem tanta plane me movebat, nisi tu opposuisses non 4222 II, XXVIII | etiam patrem, non perinde movebatur falsis, ut veris moveretur? 4223 I, VII | dicuntur: e quibus aër et ignis movendi vim habent et efficiendi, 4224 I, II | sine voluptatibus sensum moventibus ne suspicari quidem. Si 4225 II, XLVI | cum audiam, moveri? Tam moveor quam tu, Luculle, neque 4226 II, IX | ratum esse debeat, quod movere nulla ratio queat. Talia 4227 II, XX | oratio Luculli de ipsa re ita movit, ut docti hominis et copiosi 4228 Not, 2 | ut si sint after C.F.W. Muller, I should prefer sui for 4229 II, XXVIII | quae sunt in philosophia multae atque magnae, non est satis. 4230 II, XXIX | eum numerum unum addidero, multane erunt? Progrediere rursus, 4231 II, XXXIX | luna eamque esse terram multarum urbium et montium. Portenta 4232 II, XXXIV | sit, item, si de officio multisque aliis de rebus, in quibus 4233 I, II | eos nec satis commendati multitudini possunt esse.~5. Nonius 4234 Not, 2 | partibus egregie multis multoque minores. Tale verum: visum 4235 II, VI | Antipatrumque Stoicum, qui multus in eo fuisset, reprehendebant, 4236 Not, 1 | anonymous friend) proposed mundana from T.D. V. 108, Varro, 4237 II, XVII | gigni adfirmat, in reliquis mundis et in iis quidem innumerabilibus 4238 Not, 1 | after this Lamb. inserts munera to keep the balance of the 4239 II, II | detrahamus. Quod si, cum fungi munere debebamus, non modo operam 4240 II, XXXVIII | immunitatem magni quidem muneris: sed cum sacerdotes deorum 4241 Not, 2 | merely. Quod sit a vero: cf. Munio on Lucr. II. 51 fulgor ab 4242 Not, 2 | so Lamb. for MSS. aut. Muretus, by what Dav. calls an " 4243 I, I | novi. Silent enim diutius Musae Varronis quam solebant, 4244 Not, 1 | demonstrably wrong, physica, musica etc. scribere may be said, 4245 Not, 1 | said, but not physicam, musicam etc. scribere. The one passage 4246 Not, 2 | cultivated senses of painters and musicians have! How keen is the sense 4247 II, XXVIII | iudicabit an in litteris an in musicis? At ea non novit. In philosophia 4248 II, XXXVII | esse omnia neque id esse mutabile et id esse deum neque natum 4249 Not, 2 | as in Verr. IV. 5. The mutation of Augustine Contra Ac. 4250 II, XXXVIII | nulla vis tantos queat motus mutationemque moliri, nulla senectus diuturnitate 4251 I, VIII | tradita: cuius quas acceperim mutationes, si voltis, exponam. Nos 4252 II, XLIII | erat quidem, si perpauca mutavisset, germanissimus Stoicus. 4253 II, XIX | ita videatur, sententiam mutes deterrendum puto. Illud 4254 Not, 2 | to λοιδορειν τινα implies mutual recrimination, cf. Pro Deiotaro 4255 Not, 2 | πεντηκοντα ολιγα εστιν, τα μυρια ολιγα εστιν, also Diog. 4256 Not, 2 | which were servata et pro mysteriis custodita by the New Academics. 4257 Not, 1 | volnus, which Goer. finds so mysterious, is the death of Tullia, 4258 Not, 2 | cf. 28. Reprehensum: sc. narrasti. Id ipsum: = nihil posse 4259 Not, 2 | Orelli, Klotz alter into narrat, most wantonly. Visus Homerus, 4260 Int, IV | day after the discussion narrated in the Catulus, during which 4261 Not, 2 | which Cic. displays in narrating the opinions of philosophers, 4262 Not, 2 | resumes the interrupted narrative, see Madv. Gram. 480. Ipsa 4263 Not, 2 | may be a little broader or narrower than he seems. With all 4264 Not, 2 | senescat ... , philosophia nascatur.~§15. haesitaverunt: Goer. 4265 II, XXXIII | illud, quod nunc Favonio nascente purpureum videtur, idem 4266 I, II | potesne dicere? cuius et nascentis et senescentis alias hebetiora, 4267 II, IX | proditiones et rerum publicarum nasci solent. Non potest igitur 4268 II, XLI | terram. Ex quo illa conclusio nascitur: si sol quantus sit percipi 4269 I, IIII | Natrices dicuntur angues natantes Cic. Academicorum lib. IIII.: 4270 Int, III | because the energy of the nation has been diverted into other 4271 Not, 1 | tendency to aspirate even native Latin words see Boscher 4272 I, IIII | 118.~27. Nonius p. 65. Natrices dicuntur angues natantes 4273 II, XXXVIII | enim voltis—, tantam vim natricum viperarumque fecerit? cur 4274 II, XIX | et aliquot annis minorem natu, non dubitabo monere: Tune, 4275 II, XLI | enim animorum ingeniorumque naturale quoddam quasi pabulum consideratio 4276 I, V | Ac de summo quidem atque naturali bono sic agunt: cetera autem 4277 I, X | eas perturbationes antiqui naturalis esse dicerent et rationis 4278 I, X | ex homine non tollerent, naturaque et condolescere et concupiscere 4279 II, XXXIX | ecquid nos eodem modo rerum naturas persecare, aperire, dividere 4280 I, XI | XI. De naturis autem sic sentiebat, primum, 4281 Not, 2 | 87. Scilicet: Germ. "naturlich." Fabricata sit: cf. 30, 4282 Not, 2 | with the Megarian. Fuit: = natus est, as often. Herilli: 4283 Not, 2 | of eggs was discussed ad nauseam by the sceptics and dogmatists. 4284 II, XLVIII | Verum, quoniam non solum nauta significat, sed etiam Favonius 4285 Not, 2 | inhibendum, which had also a nautical signification, but finding 4286 Not, 2 | malleolus, a similar expression (naves malleolis confixae) and 4287 Not, 2 | Nave: so the best MSS., not navi, cf. Madv. Gram. 42. Duodeviginti: 4288 Not, 2 | Bell. Gall. V. 9 veritus navibus. Halm and Bait. follow Christ' 4289 II, XLVIII | Catulus remansit: nos ad naviculas nostras descendimus.~ ~ 4290 II, XLVIII | Favonius ipse insusurrat navigandi nobis, Luculle, tempus esse 4291 II, III | Neapolitanum, mihi in Pompeianum navigare. Cum igitur pauca in xysto 4292 II, I | Itaque cum totum iter et navigationem consumpsisset partim in 4293 II, XXXI | perceptum se ex sententia navigaturum? Qui potest? Sed si iam 4294 II, XXXI | Puteolos stadia triginta, probo navigio, bono gubernatore, hac tranquillitate, 4295 Not, 2 | Pliny Nat. Hist. XXXIV. 14 navis fixa malleo. Adfixa therefore 4296 Not, 2 | I. 3. Navalibus pugnis: ναυμαχιαις. Instrumento et adparatu: 4297 Int, IV | to leave for his villa at Neapolis, Cicero for his at Pompeii278. 4298 II, III | ventus esset, Lucullo in Neapolitanum, mihi in Pompeianum navigare. 4299 Not, 1 | δογματικον. Stobaeus II. 6, 4 neatly slips out of the difficulty; 4300 Not, 2 | Contra Ac. III. 14 (quasdam nebulas obfundere), also the joke 4301 II, XLIII | cara esse, partim etiam necessaria. Sed ille vereor ne virtuti 4302 I, IX | semovendus est: qui cum maxime necessariam partem philosophiae, quae 4303 Not, 2 | the verb contingit denotes necessarily good fortune is quite unfounded; 4304 Not, 2 | Academicism was excusable from the necessities of the age in which it appeared. 4305 Not, 2 | the bent oar, the pigeon's neck, the twins, the impressions 4306 II, VIII | ignorabit sapientia sit necne, quo modo primum obtinebit 4307 I, VII | efficiat multa improvisa ac necopinata nobis propter obscuritatem 4308 II, VII | deinde sequitur, maiora nectens, ut haec, quae quasi expletam 4309 II, VI | definienda censebant. Alii autem negabant se pro hac evidentia quicquam 4310 II, VII | artificem dicemus esse, illum negabimus, sed cum alterum percepta 4311 II, XIX | qui ex te illa cognoveram, negabis esse rem ullam quae cognosci, 4312 II, XIV | se fatebuntur. Sin autem negabunt vera visa a falsis posse 4313 II, XLIV | commoveri et conturbari negarent? Mediocritates illi probabant 4314 II, XIX | tibi constares, cum idem negares quicquam certi posse reperiri, 4315 Not, 1 | Cf. Goerenz's statement "negari omnino nequit hac vi saepius 4316 Not, 2 | it as a superabundance of negation arising from a sort of anacoluthon, 4317 Not, 2 | απαραλλακτος). This opinion is negatived by non patitur ut and it 4318 Not, 2 | scribes insert and omit negatives very recklessly, so that 4319 II, XIV | vera definitio sit? sin negaverint, fatendum sit, quoniam vel 4320 II, XXXII | arbitratu suo reprehendat, quod negemus rem ullam percipi posse, 4321 II, XXII | quam multos annos esse negitavisset, veri et falsi notam. Excogitavit 4322 Not, 2 | like ολιγωρειν, merely to neglect or pass by. Effabimur; cf. 4323 Int, IV | means natural to Cicero. The negotiations between Atticus and Cicero 4324 Int, III | great war. Others, like the Neoptolemus of Ennius, thought a little 4325 Int, IV | have had to deal. He was nephew of Cato, whose half-sister 4326 II, XXV | Avianium, fortasse in porticu Neptuni ambulantem, non videmus. 4327 Not, 2 | opifices et tabernarios quid neqoti est concitare? Expromam: 4328 II, XIX | adstricti, ut nos commovere nequeamus. 62. Sublata enim adsensione 4329 I, VII | natura minimum quod dividi nequeat: quae autem moveantur, omnia 4330 Not, 1 | accusative only follows nequeo, volo, malo, possum, and 4331 Not, 1 | statement "negari omnino nequit hac vi saepius pronomen 4332 II, XXXIX | ea nota sunt nobis, quae nervorum natura sit, quae venarum? 4333 II, XLI | nostrum ignorare, quippe qui nesciamus soli an aetheri serviamus. 4334 I, IV | ceteris, quod illi quae nesciant scire se putent, ipse se 4335 Not, 1 | clever emendator, gives nescient to suit malent above, and 4336 II, XLVII | tu nunc, Catule, lucere nescis nec tu, Hortensi, in tua 4337 Not, 2 | basis for action. Hermann's neu cui labours under the same 4338 I, X | docebat, contraque contraria: neutra autem in mediis relinquebat, 4339 Not, 1 | with nature, and some were neutral. To the first class he assigned 4340 II, XLII | summum bonum est in his rebus neutram in partem moveri, quae αδιαφορια 4341 II, XLIII | Peripateticos dicenda. Hic igitur neutri adsentietur? Sin, inquam, 4342 II, XL | Tu vero ista ne asciveris neve fueris commenticiis rebus 4343 Not, 2 | εσ' Αθηνας and "coals to Newcastle," see Lorenz on Plaut. Miles 4344 Not, 1 | Varrone: from M. Varro's house news came. Audissemus: Cic. uses 4345 Not, 1 | he is right). Plato uses νευρα εκτεμνειν metaphorically. 4346 Pre | with the peculiarities and niceties of language which the best 4347 Not, 2 | in the beginning of the Nicom. Eth. Aristot. assumes that 4348 Abbr | Aristotle; Nic. Eth. = Nicomachean Ethics; Mag. Mor. = Magna 4349 Int, IV | there absorbed in study till nightfall136. Often exertion failed 4350 II, XI | possit accidere ut id, quod nigrum sit, album esse videatur? 4351 II, XXXV | invenio. Itaque incognito nimirum adsentiar, id est, opinabor. 4352 Int, IV | them more closely together. Nine years before he had pressed 4353 II, XIV | comprehensis et perceptis nisa et progressa ratio hoc efficiet, 4354 Not, 1 | his style (cf. loquendi nitor ille divinus, Quint. X. 4355 Not, 2 | which would be written nobas, and then pass into bonas. 4356 II, XXIII | videri, quae vosmet ipsi nobilissimis philosophis placuisse conceditis. 4357 Not, 2 | lucem eripere), N.D. I. 6 (noctem obfundere) Aug. Contra Ac. 4358 II, XXXVIII | se a deo, non et dies et noctes divinum numen horrere et, 4359 II, XX | Cynosuram,~'Qua fidunt duce nocturna Phoenices in alto,'~ut ait 4360 Not, 1 | which the stars are mere nodes, and with which they revolve. 4361 Not, 1 | as rerum notae. Berkley's nodis for notis has no support, ( 4362 Not, 2 | ανθρωποις περικαρδιον εστι νοημα is translated, see R. and 4363 Not, 2 | εννοιαι are called αποκειμεναι νοησεις (Plut. De Sto. Repug. p. 4364 Not, 2 | dogmatist theory of μνημη and νοησις is dealt with in exactly 4365 II, XXXII | a te totus diversus est: noli mecum, qui hoc quidem certe, 4366 Not, 2 | Nolumus: Halm and Bait., give nolimus; so fine a line divides 4367 II, II | qui sermonibus eius modi nolint personas tam gravis illigari. 4368 II, XXVI | refelli possunt, sed pugnare nolo. Ad id enim, quod agitur, 4369 I, VI | quasi qualitatem quandam nominabant: dabitis enim profecto, 4370 II, XLII | his Eleatici philosophi nominabantur. Post Euclides, Socratis 4371 I, XI | sin aliter, inscientiam nominabat: ex qua exsisteret etiam 4372 I, Inc | vel veri similia putavi nominanda: quae tu si alio nomine 4373 II, XLIV | Stoicorum, quae παραδοξα nominantur, sed ubi Xenocrates, ubi 4374 II, XXV | nescio qui, qui in scholis nominari solet, mille et octingenta 4375 I, VIII | causa quaeque essent ita nominata, quam ετυμολογιαν appellabant: 4376 I, VIII | appellabant, iam a Platone ita nominatam, nos recte speciem possumus 4377 II, V | appellabat, cum veteres physicos nominatis, facere idem, quod seditiosi 4378 Not, 1 | which expressions will be nominatives to poterit, further, there 4379 II, XLII | sapientem, quae απαθεια nominatur. Has igitur tot sententias 4380 II, XLII | princeps Xenophanes, quem modo nominavi, deinde eum secuti Parmenides 4381 II, V | nostrum inimicum potissimum nominem, simile quicquam habuit 4382 II, VI | evidentiam nos, si placet, nominemus fabricemurque, si opus erit, 4383 Not, 1 | προηγμενα id est producta nominentur, quae vel ita appellemus, 4384 I, XII | exposuisti, vetus, haec nova nominetur: quae usque ad Carneadem 4385 Not, 1 | suit better. Institutis: νομω of Democritus, see R. and 4386 Not, 2 | exist ετεηι and not merely νομωι as appearances do. See R. 4387 Not, 1 | Philonia is improbable from its non-appearance elsewhere, while the companion 4388 Int, II | vivendi). All speculative and non-ethical doctrines were merely estimable 4389 II, VI | Carneades diu tenuit: nam nonaginta vixit annos, et qui illum 4390 | nondum 4391 Not, 2 | cf. 67, 78, 112, 148. The nonnulli are Philo and Metrodorus, 4392 Not, 2 | T.D. II. 55 ingemescere nonnum quam viro concessum est, 4393 Not, 2 | of Arcesilas (59). What nonsense they talk about inquiring 4394 Not, 2 | Perpendiculum is a plumb line, norma a mason's square, the word 4395 I, II | p. 162. Perpendiculi et normae. Cic. Academicorum lib. 4396 I, II | egeremus perpendiculis, non normis, non regulis.~9. Nonius 4397 II, XXVI | concludant nihil esse quod nosci, percipi, comprehendi possit, 4398 II, II | otium, qui in eo non modo nosmet ipsos hebescere et languere 4399 II, III | cum eo Catulus et Lucullus nosque ipsi postridie venissemus, 4400 | nostram 4401 Not, 2 | the confusion is frequent, notably in the Sophistes and Theaetetus. 4402 Not, 1 | verba or nomina as rerum notae. Berkley's nodis for notis 4403 Not, 2 | of," and is so used after notare in De Or., III. 186. Convicio: 4404 Not, 1 | Halm to retract his bad em. notationibus for notas ducibus, the word 4405 Not, 2 | notius quale sit, pluribus notatum vocabulis idem declarantibus. 4406 Not, 2 | item from N.D. I. 3, noting at the same time that in 4407 II, XXVI | facere non posset? Qua igitur notione discerneres? 86. Quid? si 4408 II, XLII | cuius est disciplina nunc notior, neque tamen cum Cyrenaicis 4409 II, XXXIX | eo tamen aiunt empirici notiora esse illa, quia possit fieri 4410 II, V | consules essent; tum ad hos notiores, C. Flaminium, qui legem 4411 II, XXXII | ea, quae paulo ante dixi, notissima. Licet enim haec quivis 4412 Not, 2 | ζητησιν), Plut. De Communi Notit. adv. Stoicos p. 1077 (‛ 4413 Not, 2 | described in D.F. III. 14 erit notius quale sit, pluribus notatum 4414 Int, II | author of the Organon were notorious for their ignorance of logic112, 4415 II, XI | poterunt. Ut enim confidant, notum iis esse debebit insigne 4416 Not, 1 | Omnis eius oratio tamen: notwithstanding his negative dialectic he 4417 Int, II | had ever found their best nourishment in the teaching of the Academic 4418 Not, 2 | the MSS. sub nubes. The Novae Tabernae were in the forum, 4419 I, VII | Aut enim nova sunt rerum novarum facienda nomina aut ex aliis 4420 I, XII | et ea, quae ab Arcesila novata sunt, probas, docere quod 4421 Int, III | propounded anything substantially novel in philosophy: there had 4422 Not, 2 | Colotem p. 1121 F, want of novelty is charged against Arcesilas, 4423 II, XXXIX | possit: corpora nostra non novimus: qui sint situs partium, 4424 II, XXVIII | an in musicis? At ea non novit. In philosophia igitur. 4425 II, XXXVIII | mundum, quod nulla fuerit novo consilio inito tam praeclari 4426 Not, 2 | by 18. Academicos: i.e. novos, who are here treated as 4427 Not, 2 | εστι ζωον λογικον θνητον, νου και επιστημης δεκτικον. 4428 Not, 1 | 33 (R. and P. 264), λεγω νουν αρχην επιστημης. Definitiones 4429 Not, 2 | brilliant em. for the MSS. sub nubes. The Novae Tabernae were 4430 Not, 2 | 30 Democritus non inscite nugatur, ut physicus, quo genere 4431 II, XV | eodem modo rebus iis, quae nullae sint, ut iis, quae sint. 4432 II, XL | non adsentiar, sed quod nullis, vincam animum cuique adsentiar 4433 I, XII | permansit. Carneades autem nullius philosophiae partis ignarus 4434 I, VII | nulla pars materiae sit nullumque corpus, partis autem esse 4435 Not, 2 | disgraceful treaty with Numantia repudiated by home in 139 4436 Int, I | curious to find that Zeno is numbered by Cicero among those pupils 4437 Not, 2 | knows the nature of mind? Numberless opinions clash, as do those 4438 I, XII | Platonem ex illa vetere numeramus, cuius in libris nihil adfirmatur 4439 I, X | poneret nec quicquam aliud numeraret in bonis, idque appellaret 4440 II, XXXVII | sempiternum. Pythagorei ex numeris et mathematicorum initiis 4441 II, VII | fidibus utitur, explere numeros et conficere versus? Quod 4442 Not, 2 | persistent enemy of Metellus Numidicus, who was the uncle of Lucullus 4443 Not, 1 | Nuntiatum: the spelling nunciatum is a mistake, cf. Corssen, 4444 II, XXV | si ne sensus quidem vera nuntiant? quos tu, Luculle, communi 4445 Not, 2 | whole question lies in a nutshell; of four propositions which 4446 Int, I | of the De Legibus as "an oasis in the desert of this dreary 4447 Not, 1 | διαλεκτικη. Goodness means obedience to nature, happiness the 4448 II, XVIII | An in eo auctoritas nihil obest? Mihi quidem videtur vel 4449 Not, 1 | to govern, the latter to obey (cf. T.D. II. 47, and Arist. 4450 II, XV | se motu mentis aliquo vel obiecta terribili re extrinsecus, 4451 II, XII | appellant—, sic non potest obiectam rem perspicuam non approbare. 4452 II, XVI | adscenditis: Si tale visum obiectum est a deo dormienti, ut 4453 II, II | nobili, quam ante censuram obiit, Panaetium unum omnino comitem 4454 Int, III | peoples117. To those who objected that philosophy was best 4455 Not, 1 | the words. Ea a: Lamb., objecting to the sound (which is indeed 4456 Not, 1 | Aug. De Civ. Dei, VIII. 3. Objections to it, however occurred 4457 I, XI | quadam quasi impulsione oblata extrinsecus, quam ille φαντασιαν, 4458 Pre | MSS. than that of Halm. My obligations other than those to Halm 4459 II, XXXIII | illa etiam, quae sciebat, oblitus est? Atqui, falsum quod 4460 Not, 2 | volebant; the em. of Dav. obscurare is against Cic.'s usage, 4461 Not, 2 | pleasure and pain would be obscured. Sentiet ... insaniat: For 4462 II, XVII | gravitas aut tarditas aut obscuriora sunt quae videntur aut a 4463 I, VII | necopinata nobis propter obscuritatem ignorationemque causarum.~ 4464 Not, 1 | in argument, but to the obscurity of phenomena, which had 4465 II, XXIX | interrogati, dives pauper, clarus obscurus sit, multa pauca, magna 4466 II, III | infirmissimo tempore aetatis aut obsecuti amico cuidam aut una alicuius, 4467 Not, 2 | Halm qu. from Wesenberg Observ. Crit. ad Or. p. Sestio 4468 Not, 2 | usage, that of Christ quam observari nolunt is wanton without 4469 II, XXXIV | actionem puto repugnare visis, obsistere opinionibus, adsensus lubricos 4470 II, VII | et omnia removentur, quae obstant et impediunt. Itaque et 4471 II, XXV | quicquam interiectum est quod obstet, sed intendi acies longius 4472 II, III | omnis cognitio multis est obstructa difficultatibus eaque est 4473 Pre | then to aid the student in obtaining a higher knowledge of Ciceronian 4474 Int, IV | Madvig suspects155, thus obtains its natural meaning. Cicero 4475 II, VIII | sit necne, quo modo primum obtinebit nomen sapientiae? deinde 4476 II, VI | voluit evertere. Quam nisi obtinemus, percipi nihil posse concedimus.~ 4477 Not, 1 | 52, quae secundum locum obtinent, προηγμενα id est producta 4478 I, Inc | cerni videantur, hebetes et obtusi.~33. August. contra Academicos 4479 I, II | positum pro obscuro aut obtuso. Cicero Academicorum lib. 4480 Not, 2 | excellent sense; cf. T.D. II. 52 obversentur honestae species viro. Bait. 4481 Not, 1 | Klotz conj. sit in order to obviate the awkwardness of repugnet 4482 II, XXXVIII | ornatus umquam dilapsus occidat. Tibi hoc repudiare, illud 4483 I, Inc | Academicis) morem fuisse occultandi sententiam suam nec eam 4484 I, I | arbitror esse scribere quod occultari velit: sed habeo opus magnum 4485 II, XIX | defendere. An tu, cum res occultissimas aperueris in lucemque protuleris 4486 I, XII | omnia latere censebat in occulto: neque esse quicquam quod 4487 I, IV | omnes ante eum philosophi occupati fuerunt, avocavisse philosophiam 4488 II, II | magna rei militaris esse occupatio solet, ut non multum imperatori 4489 Int, I | overwhelmed all thought of other occupation. Soon after his return from 4490 Int, IV | Priora. He would naturally occupy the [lvii] place given to 4491 Not, 2 | completur: MSS. have occuret mostly, if that is retained 4492 II, XVIII | est, cum ei res similes occurrant, quas non habeat dinotatas, 4493 II, XXXII | probabilitatem, ubicumque haec aut occurrat aut deficiat, aut 'etiam' 4494 II, XIV | Occurretur enim, sicut occursum est. Nam concludi argumentum 4495 Not, 2 | Duodeviginti: 82, I just note that octodecim is not used by Cic. Sol 4496 Not, 2 | Octingenta: so the best MSS., not octoginta, which however agrees better 4497 I, II | arte adhibita de rebus ante oculos positis volgari sermone 4498 Not, 2 | evident imitation of Hom. Od. T 163 ου γαρ απο δριος 4499 II, VII | necesse est de gustatu et odoratu loqui, in quibus intellegentia, 4500 II, VII | idem fit in vocibus, in odore, in sapore, ut nemo sit 4501 Not, 2 | judgments on one and the same odour. The student will observe 4502 Not, 2 | thinks, the Atridae, keeps Odysseus alive awhile in order to 4503 Not, 1 | Negavit: for his various offences see D.F. V. 12 sq., T.D. 4504 Not, 2 | si te secundo lumine his offendere—Ad Att. VII. 26, 1) but 4505 II, XXXI | specie probabile, si nihil se offeret quod sit probabilitati illi 4506 Not, 2 | and yet excepted his own officers from its operation. Prooemio, 4507 II, VIII | alienum? Itemque, si quid offici sui sit non occurrit animo, 4508 Not, 2 | Academy must be desertor officiorum omnium. Comprehensi ... 4509 II, XXV | aqua, sic nobis aër crassus offunditur. At amplius non desideramus. 4510 II, XIX | quos tu probas, tantis offusis tenebris ne scintillam quidem 4511 Int, II | reconciled with his own oft-repeated statements that he never 4512 Not, 2 | Eud. VII. 13 (qu. by Dav.) οφθαλμους διαστρεψαντα ‛ωστε δυο το ‛ 4513 Int, I | makes reference in his works oftener than to any other instructor. 4514 Int, IV | have taken the fatal step; oh dear! if you only knew at 4515 Not, 2 | σοφωτερος ειναι, ‛οτι α μη οιδα ουδε οιομαι ειδεναι, a very 4516 Not, 2 | voltis. Opinationem: the οιησιν of Sext., e.g. P.H. III. 4517 Not, 2 | 91, De Inv. II. 6; inv. = οικιστης.~§132. Quemlibet: cf. 125, 4518 Not, 1 | Hyp. I. 221 τον Πλατωνα οιν ‛οι μεν δογματικον εφασαν 4519 Not, 2 | ειναι, ‛οτι α μη οιδα ουδε οιομαι ειδεναι, a very different 4520 Not, 1 | phrases ‛ροη, παντα ‛ρει, ‛οιον ‛ρευματα κινεισθαι τα παντα, 4521 Not, 1 | πολυφωνος ων, ουχ ‛ως τινες οιονται πολυδοξος. Exposuisti: Durand' 4522 Not, 1 | πανδεχες is also quoted from Okellus in Stob. I. 20, 3. Binder 4523 Int, IV | remember "Catulus and the olden times223." The statement 4524 Not, 2 | συγχεομεν τον βιον), VIII. 372 (‛ολην συγχεει την φιλοσοφον ζητησιν), 4525 II, VII | canorum illud, hoc bene olens, hoc asperum.' Animo iam 4526 Not, 2 | too strong; it means, like ολιγωρειν, merely to neglect or pass 4527 Not, 2 | Stoic πνευμα ενδιηκον δι ‛ολου του κοσμου (Plut. De Plac. 4528 Not, 2 | Corss. I. 116. Rogus: an ill omened and unknown name. Rocus, 4529 Not, 2 | subiciuntur per figuram omissionis. Relicta: cf. 130 abiectos. 4530 Pre | for notices of errors and omissions from any who are interested 4531 I, I | forte Roma novi, Atticus: Omitte ista, quae nec percontari 4532 Not, 2 | omnibus hardly ever stands for omn. rebus, therefore C.F. Hermann 4533 II, XXVI | quod agitur, nihil interest omnibusne partibus visa res nihil 4534 I, VII | tota omnia accipere possit omnibusque modis mutari atque ex omni 4535 II, VII | philosophiam, sed omnis vitae usus omnisque artis una maxime continet, 4536 Not, 2 | purely Stoic expression, ‛ωμοιωμενον τη φυσει; cf. 38 and D.F. 4537 Not, 2 | Anaxagoras: he made no ‛ομοιομερειαι of snow, but only of water, 4538 Not, 2 | an attempt to translate ‛ομοιομερειας. Eas primum, etc.: cf. the 4539 Not, 2 | constructions in Gk. with ‛ομοιον, μεταξυ, μεσος, and such 4540 Not, 2 | Similitudinibus: καθ' ‛ομοιωσιν Sext. Pyrr. Hyp. II. 75. 4541 Not, 2 | by refusing τον ‛ηλιον ‛ομολογειν ειναι καταληπτον (Galen 4542 Not, 2 | Hyp. II. 143 λογος δι' ‛ομολογουμενων λημματων (premisses) κατα 4543 Int, I(62) | περι ‛ομονοιας, Ad Att. IX. 9, §2, etc.~