Book, Paragraph

1   I,  59|     statement diminished, if an error is made in number or case,
2 III,   7|       doubt, point out Cicero's error, refute, rebut his rash
3 III,  15| detected in a similarly vicious error.
4 III,  16|         to have fallen into any error through ignorance. For if
5 III,  16|     supposed and believed, your error, originating in prejudice,
6 III,  38|       power, when you fill into error about the gods themselves?
7  IV,  28|       form of vice, wickedness, error, without bringing it forward,
8  VI,  14|   planes. Is not this, then, an error? Is it not, to speak accurately,
9 VII,  29|      attributed to a ridiculous error, but, to speak more plainly,
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