Book, Chapter

 1  Pre     |       the change in the cultured speech of a language is a process
 2    1,   6|     effect that the body of your speech has lost its vigor and died.
 3    1,  10| listening so attentively to this speech that I did not notice the
 4    1,  10|          taken exceptions to the speech of Agamemnon. While, therefore,
 5    1,  10|         arrangement of the whole speech, I seized the opportunity
 6    2,  52|      tell me the subject of your speech today, Agamemnon, for, though
 7    2,  52|      Give me the outline of your speech if you like me."~"A poor
 8    2,  62|           at this last figure of speech, and when Ascyltos' adversary
 9    4, 122|         out from the body of the speech; they should gleam with
10    4, 122|         scrupulous exactitude in speech. This hasty composition
11    5, 130|     smiled broadly at this blunt speech. "Don't have such a high
12    5, 136|        cheerful kindness my pure speech endows;~What people do,
13    5, 145|       addition to the freedom of speech that pours forth every obscenity,
14    5, 145|         Scipio Africanus, in his speech in defense of Tib. Asellus,
15    5, 145|      years of the time when this speech was delivered, we read in
16    5, 153|        another apostle of direct speech; a jealous prostitute who
17    5, 156|    victims by equivocal forms of speech, and having thus obtained
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