Book,  Par.

 1     I,     89|       convinced them that it was a false alarm. ~ ~
 2    II,    110|         Nor did Tiberius check the false reports till by lapse of
 3   III,      9|          to believe that they were false and groundless, and that
 4   III,     53|           Magius Caecilianus, with false charges of treason. Both
 5    IV,     43|         assailed his sister with a false charge of treason. Catus,
 6    IV,     47|       reproaches against Augustus, false indeed, but urged with powerful
 7    IV,     68|         discharging their darts on false alarms.~ ~
 8     V,     13|           let the story be true or false, he hurried by the bays
 9    VI,     13|           that Tiberius believed a false charge. For this Vestilius
10    VI,     67|            hatred because they are false in friendship. He delayed
11    XI,     21|         These extreme and possibly false stories at least had their
12   XII,     49|  Britannicus were removed, some on false pretexts, others by way
13   XII,     69|            longer able to endure a false accusation and an undeserved
14  XIII,     14|          always daring and was now false. ~ ~
15   XIV,     53|         been publicly convicted of false accusation.~ ~
16    XV,     26|           this fashion, but as for false praise which has been extorted
17    XV,     63|            be true, was not wholly false. ~ ~
18   XVI,      3|       dreams had never before been false, and that now for the first
19   XVI,      8| imputations utterly groundless and false. Silanus, in truth, was
20   XVI,     37|       guise of virtuous tastes are false and deceitful in friendship,
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