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Q 1/51
Score 0
for the purpose of finishing these things
30
ad eas res conficiendas
Q 2/51
Score 0
up to ten thousand of men
30
ad hominum milia decem
51 questions
Q.
for the purpose of finishing these things
1
30 sec
Q.
up to ten thousand of men
2
30 sec
Q.
having been moved by the authority
3
30 sec
Q.
since they stood before everyone in virtue
4
30 sec
Q.
it was right that a punishment should follow one having been damned
5
30 sec
Q.
they might leave from their own boundaries with all of their abundances
6
30 sec
Q.
to obtain those things which were reaching for the purpose of setting out
7
30 sec
Q.
in that time he obtained the chief position in the state
8
30 sec
Q.
a very few would easily be able to prohibit them
9
30 sec
Q.
they compete in almost daily battles
10
30 sec
Q.
all the grain
11
30 sec
Q.
All Gaul has been divided into three parts
12
30 sec
Q.
having been led on by this speech they give loyalty and an oath between themselves
13
30 sec
Q.
all of these differ among themselves in language, institutions, and laws
14
30 sec
Q.
from these things it happened
15
30 sec
Q.
men desirous of war were being affected with great grief
16
30 sec
Q.
he might try the same thing
17
30 sec
Q.
he might be burned by fire
18
30 sec
Q.
they wage war on their own boundaries
19
30 sec
Q.
on their journey an abundance of grain might be available
20
30 sec
Q.
he takes up for himself the embassy to the states
21
30 sec
Q.
with L. Piso and A. Gabinius as consuls
22
30 sec
Q.
a thousand paces/ a mile
23
30 sec
Q.
they would be able to bring war upon those neighboring them less easily
24
30 sec
Q.
they would wander less widely
25
30 sec
Q.
by their own customs
26
30 sec
Q.
nevertheless the Helvetii try to do that which they had decided
27
30 sec
Q.
that there was not a doubt but that the Helvetii were the most powerful of the whole of Gaul
28
30 sec
Q.
they set on fire all of their own towns, in number up to twelve, their villages up to four hundred, [and] the private buildings having been left behind
29
30 sec
Q.
they forced Orgetorix to plead his case from chains
30
30 sec
Q.
that it would be very easy
31
30 sec
Q.
he proves to those that to complete their attempts would be very easy in doing
32
30 sec
Q.
except that which they were going to carry with them
33
30 sec
Q.
because
34
30 sec
Q.
about which reason
35
30 sec
Q.
by as great journeys as possible he hurries into furthest Gaul
36
30 sec
Q.
to buy up as great a number as possible
37
30 sec
Q.
one of which the Belgae inhabit
38
30 sec
Q.
who are called Celts in the language of their own selves and Gauls in ours
39
30 sec
Q.
but that he himself decided upon death for himself
40
30 sec
Q.
having been led on by a desire of the kingdom
41
30 sec
Q.
they go before the rest in virtue
42
30 sec
Q.
they prevent them from their own boundaries
43
30 sec
Q.
that they would take possession of the whole of Gaul in their power
44
30 sec
Q.
they hope that they themselves are ableto take possession of the whole of Gaul
45
30 sec
Q.
when they now judged that they were prepared for this thing
46
30 sec
Q.
he gathered from all sides
47
30 sec
Q.
the Helvetii are contained on all sides by the nature of the place
48
30 sec
Q.
so that with the hope of a return home having been lifted they would be more prepared for the purpose of undergoing all dangers
49
30 sec
Q.
or by force they would force so that they might lie open to them to go through their own boundaries