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Marcus Tullius Cicero Academica Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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6552 Int, IV | Academico-Peripatetic school was unjustifiable. There is actual warrant 6553 Int, I | orator of Rome, as he not unjustly boasts12. For two years 6554 Not, 1 | of literature which the unlearned read, I proceeded to introduce 6555 Not, 1 | edd. have sint, which is unlikely to be right. Nos in nostra: 6556 Not, 1 | His power of supplying is unlimited. There is a curious similarity 6557 Int, II | fact we shall find a key to unlock many difficulties in Cicero' 6558 Int, III | Greeks, [xxx] but for Romans unmanly, unpractical and unstatesmanlike127. 6559 Int, III | but for Romans unmanly, unpractical and unstatesmanlike127. 6560 Pre | more than anything else the unproductiveness of English scholarship as 6561 Int, I | to have caused an almost unquenchable thirst for reading at this 6562 Int, IV | consulares who had given their unreserved approval to the measures 6563 Int, I | that he therefore returns unreservedly to the life most in accordance 6564 Int, IV | seems to have been still unsatisfied with his choice of interlocutors 6565 Not, 2 | the two ideas together as unscriptural. Cf. esp Aug. De Civ. Dei 6566 Int, I | then at Rome because of the unsettled state of Athens, whose lectures 6567 Not, 2 | mind, and the soundness or unsoundness of his eyes (Sext. 181—189).~§ 6568 Int, III | unmanly, unpractical and unstatesmanlike127. There were plenty of 6569 Not, 2 | this is simply passive, = "untaught," as in Prop. I. 2, 12, 6570 Not, 2 | general. This was due to his untiring study and his marvellous 6571 Not, 2 | 56, Orat. 64. Integra: "untrammelled," cf. the phrase "non mihi 6572 Pre | 1810. To the poverty and untrustworthiness of Goerenz's learning Madvig' 6573 II, XXXIX | cupiditatis, an simplex unusque sit? si simplex, utrum sit 6574 Pre | dealing with a subject so unusually difficult and so rarely 6575 Not, 2 | must have condemned the unwarrantable verbal innovations of Zeno 6576 Int, III | the charge is also quite unwarranted. If the later philosophy 6577 Int, III | condemnation, and being unwilling to allow that anything good 6578 Int, I | philosophy.11 It would be unwise to lay too much stress on 6579 Not, 2 | Democritus. You at once upbraid me for believing such monstrous 6580 Not, 2 | that Carneades in any way upheld καταληψις? Dicantur: i.e. 6581 Not, 2 | are wrong, Lucullus, in upholding your cause in spite of my 6582 Int, IV | Cicero, the kindest, the most upright, the wisest, the holiest 6583 Not, 2 | beneath the eye and pressing upwards or sideways. Cf. Aristot. 6584 II, I | potuit, caruit omnino rebus urbanis. Ut enim admodum adolescens 6585 I, III | Varro. Nam nos in nostra urbe peregrinantis errantisque 6586 II, XLIV | nostras non esse leges? ne urbis quidem aut civitatis, nisi 6587 II, XXXIX | eamque esse terram multarum urbium et montium. Portenta videntur, 6588 Int, II | thoroughly Roman. Cicero further urges arguments similar to some 6589 II, XL | studiosus nobilitatis fui. Urguebor iam omnium vestrum convicio. 6590 II, XI | iis irridentur. Non enim urguent, ut coarguant neminem ulla 6591 Not, 2 | the objects of sense.~10. Urinari is to dive; for the derivation 6592 Int, IV | consoles Atticus for the uselessness of his copies of the first 6593 I, VII | faciamus enim tractando usitatius hoc verbum et tritius—materiam 6594 II, XXXIV | probabile.~Et tamen illud usitatum et saepe repudiatum refers, 6595 I, VI | haec iam diu tractantur, utamur verbis interdum inauditis.~ 6596 II, XXVII | finxerit vel, ut tuo verbo utar, quae fabricata sit hominem? 6597 I, VII | quin etiam Graecis licebit utare, cum voles, si te Latina 6598 II, X | sic adripit, ut iis statim utatur, alia quasi recondit, e 6599 I, VIII | quasi rerum notis ducibus utebantur ad probandum et ad concludendum 6600 I, XI | verbum quidem: erit enim utendum in reliquo sermone saepius. 6601 II, XIV | partitiones et horum luminibus utens oratio, tum similitudines 6602 II, VII | possent, quo tandem his modo uteremur? quo modo autem quid cuique 6603 | uterque 6604 II, XXXI | probabilitati illi contrarium, utetur eo sapiens ac sic omnis 6605 II, I | persequendis. Sed etsi magna cum utilitate rei publicae, tamen diutius 6606 II, XLIV | Atque illi quidem etiam utiliter a natura dicebant permotiones 6607 I, III | nostros civis erudiendos nihil utilius aut, si haec ita non sunt, 6608 | Utinam 6609 II, XLIII | tandem mihi considerare utram sententiam sequar. Praecide, 6610 | utraque 6611 Not, 1 | ultro is a dittographia from utro. The meaning would be "since 6612 Not, 1 | 2, Dicaearchi περι ψυχης utrosque, the word libros has to 6613 Int, II | magnificence about the Stoic utterances on morality, more suited 6614 Int, II | in all probability, he is uttering opinions which would have 6615 Not, 2 | an ex. of the former An uxor ducenda, of the latter An 6616 II, XXXIV | navigando, in conserendo, in uxore ducenda, in liberis procreandis 6617 II, XXVIII | configebat sagittis, cum uxorem interemebat, cum conabatur 6618 I, Inc | vel veri simile Academici vacant, quod nos ad agendum sine 6619 II, XLII | finem esse Callipho censuit: vacare omni molestia Hieronymus: 6620 II, XXXVIII | sed cum sacerdotes deorum vacationem habeant, quanto est aequius 6621 Int, IV | the only cause for his vacillation was his doubt as to how 6622 II, IV | enim mihi res est. Nam et vacuo animo illum audiebam et 6623 II, XX | elimatas. Eo fit ut errem et vager latius. Sed non de me, ut 6624 Int, IV | already seen, Atticus in vain urged his friend to dedicate 6625 Not, 2 | reading Dav. qu. D.F. II. 51, Val. Flaccus Argon. II. 547, 6626 I, IX | Arcesilam anteiret aetate valdeque subtiliter dissereret et 6627 Not, 2 | ad eius inventionem non valeat pervenire, also ibid. III. 6628 II, VII | veritas, si et sani sunt ac valentes et omnia removentur, quae 6629 I, V | dicebant, quae ad virtutis usum valerent. Nam virtus animi bonis 6630 II, V | videantur. Repetunt ii a P. Valerio, qui exactis regibus primo 6631 II, XXX | vis denique conclusionis valet, eadem est in utroque. Sed 6632 Int, I | his political weakness, vanity, and irresolution, make 6633 Not, 2 | word often used of those vanquished in a fight, cf. Hor. Sat. 6634 II, XIII | reliqua vero multa et varia oratione defendunt, quae 6635 I, VII | simplices: ex his autem ortae variae sunt et quasi multiformes. 6636 Int, II | maintains a view entirely at variance with the whole of the fourth 6637 I, III | III.: in tanta animantium varietate, homini ut soli cupiditas 6638 I, III | verbis attulisti, atque ipse varium et elegans omni fere numero 6639 I, Inc | Tullius huic (i.e. M.T. Varroni) tale testimonium perhibet, 6640 I, I | Silent enim diutius Musae Varronis quam solebant, nec tamen 6641 Not, 2 | εναργη, a term used with varying signification by all the 6642 II, XXXIII | auspicia, oracula, somnia, vaticinationes, seque ab adsensu sustineat: 6643 Not, 2 | anacoluthon, comparing In Vatin. 3, Ad Fam. XII. 24. The 6644 Not, 2 | inventor like Vitelliana, Vatinia etc.~§71. Quoque ... argumento: 6645 Not, 2 | moveatur: MSS. agree in ve for ne, on which see M.D.F. 6646 II, XLVII | adverterat et illum pugnum arte vehementerque compresserat, scientiam 6647 Not, 2 | remissior paulatim incitatior et vehementior factus esset," he also refers 6648 II, XLIII | esse paria. At hoc Antiocho vehementissime displicet. Liceat tandem 6649 I, IX | quandam et ingenuitatem ferat, vehementius etiam fregit quodam modo 6650 II, XLVI | sit in volgus, id honestum velimus dicere: fontem omnium bonorum 6651 II, X | eorum consilium aut quid velint. Interdum enim cum adhibemus 6652 Not, 1 | 228. Velit: Walker reads velis with St Jerome. For quod 6653 II, V | philosophiam bene iam constitutam velitis, Empedoclem, Anaxagoram, 6654 Not, 1 | iam ante Socratem: MSS. veluti amantes Socratem; Democritus ( 6655 II, XXXIX | nervorum natura sit, quae venarum? tenemusne quid sit animus, 6656 II, IV | primum in Antiochi manus venerant: et homo natura lenissimus— 6657 I, I | abessemus, ipsum ad nos venientem vidimus: atque ilium complexi, 6658 II, XLIV | multa mala videntur, quae et venientia metuat sapiens necesse est 6659 II, XXXVIII | syllabatim tibi ista dixerit, veniet flumen orationis aureum 6660 II, III | Quo quidem etiam maturius venimus, quod erat constitutum, 6661 II, III | Lucullus nosque ipsi postridie venissemus, quam apud Catulum fuissemus. 6662 II, III | quod erat constitutum, si ventus esset, Lucullo in Neapolitanum, 6663 II, XXV | omnia, iacet ista causa: veracis suos esse sensus dicit.— 6664 II, XXX | ut respondere possitis verane an falsa sint, ubi est illa 6665 Not, 2 | imprimere wird klas sisch verbunden in aliqua re, nicht in aliquam 6666 II, X | aliquantum a physicis—, ut verear ne maiorem largiar ei, qui 6667 II, XLI | credat, adfirmet, noster, ut vereatur temere opinari praeclareque 6668 II, XLI | nostrum sit, leniter ut dicam, verecundior? 127. Neque tamen istas 6669 Not, 2 | Bait. follow Christ's conj. verenti, removing the stop at voltis. 6670 Not, 2 | given in De Fato 21 Epicurus veretur ne si hoc concesserit, concedendum 6671 Not, 1 | rejects the translation veriloquium of ετυμολογια and adopts 6672 II, IV | mihi tamen videtur esse verissima. Agam igitur, sicut Antiochus 6673 II, XV | non possunt, desciscunt a veritate. Oportet igitur et ea, quae 6674 II, XLVI | omne iudicium veritatis veritatemque ipsam abductam ab opinionibus 6675 I, XII | institutis omnia teneri, nihil veritati relinqui, deinceps omnia 6676 Not, 2 | Caes. Bell. Gall. V. 9 veritus navibus. Halm and Bait. 6677 II, XLVII | quod inscientia multa versaretur in vita, tum, qui testimonium 6678 II, XLV | fugere, sed in vicinitate versari, quod facere eos etiam, 6679 Int, I | like Diodotus, was a man of versatile genius: unlike the Stoic 6680 I, Inc | Academicis eam quae ibi versatur disputationem se habuisse 6681 II, XXXIV | aliis de rebus, in quibus versatus exercitatusque sit, nescire 6682 Not, 1 | quotation. But firstly, a verse so commonplace, if familiar, 6683 Not, 2 | trite sophisms as he does verses from the comic writers is 6684 Int, I | Latin and Greek, the Greek version which he sent to Posidonius 6685 II, VII | explere numeros et conficere versus? Quod idem in similibus 6686 I, VII | illa initia et, ut e Graeco vertam, elementa dicuntur: e quibus 6687 I, I | venisse eum Roma pridie vesperi et, nisi de via fessus esset, 6688 II, XLI | malis architectis mensurae vestrae nego credere. Ergo dubium 6689 Not, 2 | causa, not mei, tui, nostri, vestri, just as he writes sua sponte, 6690 II, XLI | aliquid eam aut iubere aut vetare, nec magis adfirmabunt signum 6691 II, XXXVI | cum me incognito adsentiri vetes idque turpissimum esse dicas 6692 I, I | nobiscum et studiis isdem et vetustate amicitiae coniunctum. Itaque 6693 Not, 1 | Reperiuntur: two things vex the edd. (1) the change 6694 I, XI | ad rationem inveniendam viae reperiuntur. Errorem autem 6695 II, XXX | dialecticorum. Sequor igitur eas vias, quas didici ab Antiocho, 6696 Not, 1 | drifted on rapidly to the vices which are opposite to these 6697 II, XLV | voluptatis fugere, sed in vicinitate versari, quod facere eos 6698 II, XVI | in hortis cum Ser. Galba vicino suo ambulavisset, dixisse: ' 6699 II, XXXIX | irridemini et ipsi illum vicissim eluditis. Liber igitur a 6700 II, I | senatu non modo opinionem vicit omnium, quae de virtute 6701 Not, 1 | not." Even the Greeks fall victims to the task of expressing 6702 II, I | curiae. Quin etiam, cum victor a Mithridatico bello revertisset, 6703 Not, 1 | renovari as an em. of the ed. Victoriana of 1536. From Orelli, Klotz, 6704 Not, 2 | have simile. Xenophanem: so Victorius for the MSS. Xenoplatonem. 6705 Not, 1 | due to no mere passion for victory in argument, but to the 6706 Not, 2 | Lucullus; cf. 13. The MSS. have videant or adeant; Halm conj. adhibeant, 6707 II, XXVII | facturum paulo ante dixeris, videare mentitus. Sed ut ad ea, 6708 II, XVI | Idemque in Epicharmo:~'Nam videbar somniare med ego esse mortuum.'~ 6709 II, VII | enim notitias appellare tu videbare—, si igitur essent hae falsae 6710 II, XXI | ea sunt quaedam: iam enim videbimus—, ut tam in praecipitem 6711 II, V | exorsus est: Primum mihi videmini—me autem nomine appellabat, 6712 II, VII | in sensibus? Quam multa vident pictores in umbris et in 6713 II, IV | Mirabar: nec enim umquam ante videram. At ille, Heracliti memoriam 6714 II, I | memoria quaecumque audierat et viderat. Tali ingenio praeditus 6715 II, IV | implorans, quaerere ex eo viderenturne illa Philonis aut ea num 6716 II, XLIV | dicebant, recte secusne alias viderimus. 136. Atrocitas quidem ista 6717 II, XXIV | inventum sit paulo post videro, te ipso quidem iudice. 6718 II, XXVI | XXVI. 82. Quid ego de nave? Vidi enim a te remum contemni. 6719 I, I | ipsum ad nos venientem vidimus: atque ilium complexi, ut 6720 II, XLVII | diceret etiam quod ipse vidisset, quaeque iurati iudices 6721 II, XIII | sensibus hesterno sermone vidistis, item faciunt de reliquis, 6722 II, XXVII | modo id somniavit, ut si vigilans audiret. Experrectus enim 6723 Not, 2 | sensations at all, conj. vigilantis. Two participles used in 6724 Not, 2 | vigilanti: = aeque ac si vigilaret. Dav. missing the sense, 6725 Int, I | represented the three most vigorous and important Greek schools. 6726 Int, IV | the work of re-editing was vigorously pushed on, Cicero had constant 6727 Not, 2 | to show that the town or village of Cimmerium lay close to 6728 I, I | longo intervallo ad suam villam reduximus. 2. Hic pauca 6729 Int, I | at those of his country villas where his best collections 6730 Not, 2 | columina, while Dav. proposed vimina or vincula. That an em. 6731 II, IV | non vinci me malim quam vincere. Sed mehercule, ut quidem 6732 II, IV | quibus, si non fuerint, non vinci me malim quam vincere. Sed 6733 Not, 2 | Dav. proposed vimina or vincula. That an em. is not needed 6734 I, III | III.: aliqua potestas sit, vindicet se in libertatem.~16. Lactantius 6735 II, XVII | loquamur? Non enim proferremus vino aut somno oppressos aut 6736 II, XXVII | consentit ...'~Similia de vinolentis. Quasi quisquam neget et 6737 II, XXVII | tractata sunt. Dormientium et vinolentorum et furiosorum visa imbecilliora 6738 I, II | sanis, alius siccis, alius vinulentis ...~10. Nonius p. 474. Urinantur. 6739 II, XVI | sive in quiete sive per vinum sive per insaniam. Nam ab 6740 Not, 2 | when he refused to use violence against the tribunes. The 6741 Not, 1 | in ea parte in qua) is violent, while Goerenz's resort 6742 II, XXXVIII | voltis—, tantam vim natricum viperarumque fecerit? cur mortifera tam 6743 Not, 1 | is in old Latin poets and Virgil. Chalcedonium: not Calchedonium 6744 II, XXVIII | me expetunt:'~Quid? cum virginis fidem implorat:~'Fer mi 6745 Int, I | he had assumed the toga virilis. The pupil seems to have 6746 I, IV | communem adduxisse, ut de virtutibus et vitiis omninoque de bonis 6747 Not, 2 | abandoned it and proposed virum esse, a very strange em. 6748 II, XXV | ex lucerna flammulas esse visas: opinionis enim esse mendacium, 6749 Not, 1 | after Davies, reads se visentum for satis eum, quoting Ad 6750 Not, 2 | reason that Puteoli was not visible from Varro's villa on the 6751 II, XVI | XVI. 49. Ad has omnis visiones inanis Antiochus quidem 6752 Not, 2 | Fur. 921—1015. The mad visions of this hero, like those 6753 Int, IV | then affixed. Atticus, who visited Cicero at Tusculum, had 6754 Int, IV | that among the unpleasant visits received by Cicero at Tusculum 6755 II, XVIII | adsensum nec umquam ulli viso adsensurum, nisi quod tale 6756 Not, 1 | curricula to Lucretius' lampada vitai tradunt, etc.? In profundo: 6757 Not, 2 | from their inventor like Vitelliana, Vatinia etc.~§71. Quoque ... 6758 Not, 2 | loqueretur (ib. IV. 41), vites si loqui possint (ib. V. 6759 II, XII | nobis? Maxime autem absurdum vitia in ipsorum esse potestate 6760 II, XXIX | XXIX. Quid ergo? istius vitii num nostra culpa est? Rerum 6761 I, IV | adduxisse, ut de virtutibus et vitiis omninoque de bonis rebus 6762 II, IX | rectique proditur, quo e vitio et amicitiarum proditiones 6763 Not, 2 | medendi, Lael. 78 omnium horum vitiorum una cautio est, also 51 6764 II, VII | quibus intellegentia, etsi vitiosa, est quaedam tamen. Quid 6765 II, XXX | recte conclusi, teneo: sin vitiose, minam Diogenes reddet.' 6766 II, XXIX | respondeamus [non] habemus.—93. At vitiosi sunt soritae.—Frangite igitur 6767 Not, 2 | quo nihil putatis (Stoici) vitiosius. Most edd. read hos, which 6768 Not, 2 | the Lucullus. I note in Vitruvius, quoted by Forc. s.v. malleolus, 6769 II, XXVIII | qui:~'Video, video te. Vive, Ulixes, dum licet,'~nonne 6770 Not, 2 | dreaming sensations are as vivid as our waking ones. This 6771 Int, IV | Cicero strove to give vividness to the dialogue and [lviii] 6772 II, XXXVI | puero audivi? qui mecum vivit tot annos? qui habitat apud 6773 II, VI | annos dedit. Philone autem vivo patrocinium Academiae non 6774 II, XXIII | ullis certius possum dicere? Vixisse cum iis equidem videor: 6775 I, Inc | secum ad senectutem usque vixissent, aperire consuesse.~36. 6776 II, VI | diu tenuit: nam nonaginta vixit annos, et qui illum audierant, 6777 I, IV | sermones habere soliti, e loci vocabulo nomen habuerunt. Sed utrique 6778 I, Inc | nomina imponam; non enim vocabulorum opificem, sed rerum inquisitorem 6779 I, Inc | quae tu si alio nomine vis vocare, nihil repugno. Satis enim 6780 II, XXII | se sequerentur, Antiochii vocarentur. Mihi autem magis videtur 6781 II, XXXIX | vestigia, quos αντιποδας vocatis: cur mihi magis suscensetis, 6782 Not, 2 | cyathum, etc. Carneade: the vocative is Carneades in De Div. 6783 Not, 1 | remark "imprimit lingua voces, non exprimit." See also 6784 II, VII | iudicii. Quod idem fit in vocibus, in odore, in sapore, ut 6785 Not, 2 | multorum verborum quasi vociferatio." He is wrong however in 6786 Not, 2 | proferas; cf. also Orat. 59 vocis bonitas optanda est, non 6787 I, V | lingua etiam explanatam vocum impressionem: 20. animi 6788 Abbr | Corssen; Ausspr. = Aussprache, Vokalismus und Betonung.~Curt. = Curtius; 6789 II, XI | dicta sunt, labefactare volet, facile etiam absentibus 6790 I, II | rebus ante oculos positis volgari sermone disputant, nihil 6791 II, XLVI | forte, quod gloriosum sit in volgus, id honestum velimus dicere: 6792 Not, 1 | frequent variant perculsus. The volnus, which Goer. finds so mysterious, 6793 II, XXV | abesset videbat: quaedam volucres longius. Responderem igitur 6794 I, II | prooemiis †philosophe scribere voluimus, si modo consecuti sumus.~ 6795 Not, 1 | printed on p. 324 of the same volume in which Halm's text of 6796 II, XXVII | universas profundam, de quibus volumina impleta sunt non a nostris 6797 I, I | digladiatur cum Carneade tot voluminibus?~2. Nonius s.v. concinnare 6798 Int, I | desert of this dreary and voluminous writer." From political 6799 I, XI | volt in nobis positam et voluntariam. 41. Visis non omnibus adiungebat 6800 I, VI | gignebatur fuga desidiae voluptatumque contemptio: ex quo laborum 6801 Int, III | for Latin readers, and the voluptuous blandishments of pleasure. 6802 Not, 2 | summum bonum, quae mihi vox pecudum videtur esse non 6803 Not, 2 | generally patronises their vulgar error.~§§72—78. Summary. 6804 Not, 1 | gave quia, which was the vulgate reading down to Halm, who 6805 Not, 2 | V. 73, 119. Gloriosum in vulgus: cf. D.F. II. 44 populus 6806 Not, 2 | sceptics and the dogmatists was waged over the definition of the 6807 Not, 2 | the FileOutputStreams of Wagner and Conington. Tam certa 6808 Not, 2 | marvellous memory (2). He had to wait long for the reward of his 6809 Not, 2 | senatum starent: "were in waiting on the senate;" cf. such 6810 Not, 2 | sinuosum fortiter arcum. Wakefield on Lucr. III. 1013 puts 6811 Not, 2 | giving assent. When we have wakened from the dream, we make 6812 Int, III | philosophy, already on the wane in Greece, Cicero thought 6813 Not, 2 | defuit: such patronage was wanting in the time of Arcesilas ( 6814 Not, 2 | alter into narrat, most wantonly. Visus Homerus, etc.: this 6815 Int, I | friend of Cicero, who speaks warmly in praise of his teacher' 6816 Int, IV | had repudiated with great warmth, even charging Philo with 6817 Int, IV | unjustifiable. There is actual warrant for stating that his exposition 6818 Not, 1 | Wordsworth, "to hunt the waterfalls". The metaphor involved 6819 Int, IV | and lines of statues, the waves rippled at their feet, and 6820 Not, 2 | the soul as a seal does on wax, cf. Zeller 76 and 77 with 6821 Not, 2 | knowledge is impossible you weaken the force of your famous 6822 Not, 1 | ιδεαι of Plato, Theophrastus weakened the power of virtue (33). 6823 Not, 2 | favour of Academicism were weaker than his new arguments against 6824 Int, III | merely the amusement of the wealthy; the total devotion of a 6825 Not, 1 | strangeness had had time to wear off. In utroque: for in 6826 Not, 1 | remark, and I conclude this wearisome note. The quasi marks rerum 6827 Not, 2 | itself, as Penelope did her web, witness the Mentiens, ( 6828 Int, IV | belong to the first few weeks of his bereavement138. It 6829 Int, IV | Academy, on the wing as thou wert ever wont, flitting now 6830 Pre | Epicureans and Sceptics (whenever Zeller is quoted without 6831 Not, 2 | it not difficult to see wherein Philo's "lie" consisted. 6832 Int, IV | Carneadean theory of the πιθανον; whereupon Hortensius showed, after 6833 Not, 2 | be said to be "evidently white," if the possibility remains 6834 Not, 1 | exist in Goerenz's note, is wild, and cannot be justified 6835 Int, IV | even charging Philo with wilful misrepresentation of the 6836 Int, IV | In the evening, if the wind favoured, Lucullus was to 6837 Int, IV | Antiochus. 0 Academy, on the wing as thou wert ever wont, 6838 Not, 2 | Antibarbarus, ed. 4) "imprimere wird klas sisch verbunden in 6839 Int, IV | kindest, the most upright, the wisest, the holiest of men228. 6840 Int, IV | and was well known as a wit and writer of epigrams239.~ 6841 Int, IV | Cicero found it too late to withdraw the first edition of the 6842 Not, 2 | the wise man in madness withholds his assent." This proves 6843 Not, 2 | as Penelope did her web, witness the Mentiens, (95). You 6844 Not, 2 | a Peripatetic would have wondered how a sceptic could accept 6845 Int, I | throughout the whole of a wonderfully energetic life69. Did the 6846 Int, IV | early morning into the dense woods near his villa, and remain 6847 Not, 1 | Rivulos consectentur: so Wordsworth, "to hunt the waterfalls". 6848 Int, I | occupations, when he was working his hardest for the consulship, 6849 Not, 1 | to Zeus (i.e. the Stoic World-God), ουδε τι γιγνεται εργον 6850 Not, 2 | may say that innumerable worlds exist in every particular 6851 Int, III | abandoning himself to idleness or worse, as did so many of the most 6852 Int, IV | classed with the ancient worthies of Rome216. When he opposes 6853 Pre | which they are obtained is worthless for the purposes of education, 6854 Int, III | suffer for the supposed worthlessness of the philosophy of his 6855 Not, 2 | without the consequence "thou wouldst not have died," or something 6856 Not, 1 | puzzles Faber and excites his wrath) seems to have first been 6857 Not, 2 | Xenocrates: some edd. read Xenocrati, but cf. I. 44, D.F. II. 6858 Not, 2 | Eleaticism was in the hands of Xenoph. mainly theological. Neque 6859 Int, IV | own deeds, in the style of Xenophon, which Cicero had imitated238, 6860 Not, 1 | philosophiam: this, the Xenophontic view of Socrates, was the 6861 Not, 2 | so Victorius for the MSS. Xenoplatonem. Ed. Rom. (1471) has Cenonem, 6862 Int, IV | teaching, while he bestows [xlix] high commendation on the 6863 II, III | navigare. Cum igitur pauca in xysto locuti essemus, tum eodem 6864 Not, 2 | open to the sea, called ξυστος from its polished floor 6865 Not, 2 | the mole, which does not yearn for the light because it 6866 Int, I | end of 50. [xii] Yet he yearned for Athens and philosophy. 6867 Not, 1 | pulchritudinem, cf. the ‛υγιεια ισχυς καλλος of Stob. Eth. 6868 Not, 2 | as the earth, than that yon statue is six feet high. 6869 Not, 2 | difference, then you contradict yourselves and say there is none (44). 6870 Int, I | works he often dwells on his youthful devotion to philosophy.11 6871 Not, 1 | και διαφεροντα πασχειν ‛υπ' αλληλων, qu. from Arist. 6872 Not, 2 | differens ulla communitas (ουδε ‛υπαρχει επιμιγη απαραλλακτος). This 6873 Not, 2 | προβαινειν, πλασματωδεις ‛υπαρχουσας (Adv. Math. VIII. 367). 6874 Not, 2 | XV. 26. Profiteatur: so ‛υπισχνεισθαι is often used by Sext. e.g. 6875 Not, 1 | Subiectam ... materiam: the ‛υποκειμενη ‛υλη of Aristotle, from 6876 Not, 2 | φαισθαι τοιον η τοιον το ‛υποκειμενον (i.e. the thing from which 6877 Not, 1 | Adv. Math. VIII. 9, τα ‛υποπιπτοντα τη αισθησει. Aut ita mobiles, 6878 Not, 2 | limited propositions, Gk. ‛υποθεσεις. Quintal III. 5, 5 gives 6879 Not, 2 | et simile: for this see Zell. Socr. 222 sq, with footnotes, 6880 Not, 1 | stated to be το κατ' αρετην ζην εν τοις περι σωμα και τοις 6881 II, XXII | quod multos annos tenuisset Zenonique magistro credidisset, honestum 6882 Not, 2 | τοιουτον εστιν ‛οποιον φαινεται ζητειται. Neither Carneades nor Arcesilas 6883 Not, 2 | ολην συγχεει την φιλοσοφον ζητησιν), Plut. De Communi Notit. 6884 Not, 1 | sense of Cleanthes' hymn to Zeus (i.e. the Stoic World-God), 6885 Not, 1 | cf. Empedocles' παυρον δε ζωης αβιου μερος. Is there an