M. Tulli Ciceronis Laelius de amicitia |
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Page 39
... words in De Officiis 2 , 9 , 31 sed de amicitia alio libro dictum est qui inscribitur Laelius . There are reasons , however , for supposing that the author intended the treatise to bear also the secondary title , DE AMICITIA . In § 5 ...
... words in De Officiis 2 , 9 , 31 sed de amicitia alio libro dictum est qui inscribitur Laelius . There are reasons , however , for supposing that the author intended the treatise to bear also the secondary title , DE AMICITIA . In § 5 ...
Page 40
... word usually implies not wisdom in general but skill in some special subject ; here Roman Law ; cf. prudens in iure in 6. pontificem Scaevolam : Q. Mucius Scaevola , Pontifex Maximus , was a relative of Scaevola the Augur . He was a man ...
... word usually implies not wisdom in general but skill in some special subject ; here Roman Law ; cf. prudens in iure in 6. pontificem Scaevolam : Q. Mucius Scaevola , Pontifex Maximus , was a relative of Scaevola the Augur . He was a man ...
Page 41
... word which immediately precedes , and is 1 A. Allen and Greenough's Grammar ; G. Harkness ' Grammar , Standard ' Edition ; C. M. Gildersleeve's Grammar ; H. = Cato Maior . In referring to the works of Cicero the number of the section ...
... word which immediately precedes , and is 1 A. Allen and Greenough's Grammar ; G. Harkness ' Grammar , Standard ' Edition ; C. M. Gildersleeve's Grammar ; H. = Cato Maior . In referring to the works of Cicero the number of the section ...
Page 43
... words . exposui arbitratu meo : ' have rendered at my own discretion ' . Like very many other nouns whose stems end in ... word freely as a preposition . 4. cum enim etc .: the triple repetition of cum in this sentence seems careless and ...
... words . exposui arbitratu meo : ' have rendered at my own discretion ' . Like very many other nouns whose stems end in ... word freely as a preposition . 4. cum enim etc .: the triple repetition of cum in this sentence seems careless and ...
Page 44
... word to refer to the general worldly prosperity of Cato , indicated in C. M. 8. On the subjunctive see A. 320 , e ; G. 636 ; H. 517. maxime memorabilem : superlatives from adjectives in -bilis are rare . In 51 we have amabilissimum ...
... word to refer to the general worldly prosperity of Cato , indicated in C. M. 8. On the subjunctive see A. 320 , e ; G. 636 ; H. 517. maxime memorabilem : superlatives from adjectives in -bilis are rare . In 51 we have amabilissimum ...
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M. Tulli Ciceronis Laelius de Amicitia (Classic Reprint) Marcus Tullius Cicero No preview available - 2018 |
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.