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Examples
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Animi perturbationes summe fugiendae, metus potissimum et tristitia: earumque loco animus demulcendus hilaritate, animi constantia, bona spe; removendi terrores, et earum consortium quos non probant.
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Animi dejectio, perversa rerum existimatio, praeposterum judicium.
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Animi affectiones, si diutius inhaereant, pravos generant habitus.
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Animi dolores et zelotypia si diutius perserverent, dementes reddunt.
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Animi forte accidens quo quis rem habere nimia aviditate concupiscit, ut ludos venatores, aurum et opes avari.
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Neither let that be feared which is said, Fronti nulla fides, which is meant of a general outward behaviour, and not of the private and subtle motions and labours of the countenance and gesture; which, as Q. Cicero elegantly saith, is Animi janua, “the gate of the mind.”
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I, 14, § 16; "Animi societatem cum caelo et sideribus habere communem";
The Oriental Religions in Roman Paganism Franz Cumont
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Marcus Varro called forth the praises of Cicero for having traced in his book the portraits of more than seven hundred celebrated persons; Seneca, in his treatise 'De Tranquillitate Animi,' speaks of books ornamented with figures; and Martial addresses his thanks to
The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 16, No. 97, November, 1865 Various
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[503] Compare Seneca, "De Animi Tranquillitate," cap. xiii.
Plutarch's Morals 46-120? Plutarch
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[15] _Animi virtus_; these two words are here united to express a single idea, 'mental greatness.'
C. Sallusti Crispi De Bello Catilinario Et Jugurthino 86 BC-34? BC Sallust
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