M. Tulli Ciceronis Laelius de amicitia |
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Page 41
... present to his mind's eye for the moment , in which case he uses the present infin- itive , or ( b ) he may simply recall the fact that the event did take place in past time , in which case the perfect infinitive is used . If he was not ...
... present to his mind's eye for the moment , in which case he uses the present infin- itive , or ( b ) he may simply recall the fact that the event did take place in past time , in which case the perfect infinitive is used . If he was not ...
Page 45
... present passage ; cf. also Tusc . 5 , 20 nos vellem praemio elicere possemus , and Fam . 15 , 3 , 2. — Laelium ... putes : the omission of a conjunction to connect two clauses is particularly common in Cic . when two clauses are ...
... present passage ; cf. also Tusc . 5 , 20 nos vellem praemio elicere possemus , and Fam . 15 , 3 , 2. — Laelium ... putes : the omission of a conjunction to connect two clauses is particularly common in Cic . when two clauses are ...
Page 57
... present , and so looks on the condition as not wholly past but still continuing . The usage is like the substitution of the present for the past , for the sake of vividness , in historical narratives . Often both protasis and apodosis ...
... present , and so looks on the condition as not wholly past but still continuing . The usage is like the substitution of the present for the past , for the sake of vividness , in historical narratives . Often both protasis and apodosis ...
Page 65
... present passage the objects towards which the voluntates , studia , and sententiae are to be directed are so described as to include all things in heaven and earth . The division of all things into res divinae and res hu- manae belonged ...
... present passage the objects towards which the voluntates , studia , and sententiae are to be directed are so described as to include all things in heaven and earth . The division of all things into res divinae and res hu- manae belonged ...
Page 71
... present at the discussions in the subsequent books , which are only preserved in a fragmentary state . In 14 Cic . seems to indicate the absence of Fan- nius . patronus : ' advocate ' . The question was whether justice is an absolutely ...
... present at the discussions in the subsequent books , which are only preserved in a fragmentary state . In 14 Cic . seems to indicate the absence of Fan- nius . patronus : ' advocate ' . The question was whether justice is an absolutely ...
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Common terms and phrases
Acad amici amicitia Aristophanes Aristotle best book Books Carbo case Cato Maior Catone maiore Cicero Cicero's clause College common commonly construction consul contrast Coriolanus course death different Edited edition eius ellipsis Empedocles English Exercises expression Fannius form frequently friend friendship generally German language given good Gracchus Grammar great Greek here History Introduction Iugurtha Laelius language life made Madvig make matter meaning means mentioned merely natura neque nihil notes numquam Ohio omnibus Pacuvius pages Panegyricus passage person Ph.D phrase place Plato Pompeius practice present probably Prof Professor Prose publica question quotes reference Roby Roman same says Scaevola School Scipio second see Introd seems Selections sense sentence Seyffert sine Socrates sometimes statement Stoic student subject subjunctive taken text text-book Theophrastus things Thucydides time Tusc University used uses usual verb whole word words work writers written
Popular passages
Page 66 - Animi c. 7 quantum bonum est ubi sunt praeparata pectora in quae tuto seeretum omne descendat, quorum conscientiam minus quam tuam timeas, quorum sermo sollicitudinem leniat, sententia consilium expediat, hilaritas tristitiam dissipet, conspectus ipse delectet. qui: lit. 'what sort of?
Page vii - Est enim amicitia nihil aliud, nisi omnium divinarum humanarumque rerum cum benevolentia et caritate consensio ; qua quidem haud scio an excepta sapientia nihil melius homini sit a dis immortalibus datum.