TABLE OF MATTERS
suovetaurilia, II. 10
superstition, I. 144
swan-song, II. 47; swan, H. 105
syllogisms, II. 28, 82
synonyms, II. 76, 82; see also Schwierczina, Frontoniana, p. 151 ff.; and Brock, Studies in F. p. 110 f.; method from, u. 109; collecting, II. 77; several for meaning ' ask," I. 208; ^iro/aeva <cat irapaKoXovBovvTo, I. 38; Fronto has 125, Marcus 19; cp. in English, traps and snares, wrath and indignation, leaps and bounds, shape and form, many a time and oft, tied and bound, aches and pains, null and void, lamentation and mourning and woe
T
tautology, paratis . . . parabat, I. 56; tutum tutatur, I. 36
tax farming in Africa, I. 233
tears of dissemblers, II. 17
technical language of the arts, I. 5
Tenedos, axe of, I. 18
testimonials to friends, I. 285, and see Fr.'s various commendatory letters under Fronto
theatre, dislike of, by M. 1. 139, 141; M. reads in, I. 207; seats in, I. 275; saffron water in, II. 65
themes (materia, q.v.), I. 19; 209, 210
thunderbolt, II. 69, 135; Jove the thunderer, II. 68, 71
Thyestean banquets of Christians, II. 284n.
thyme of Hymettus, I. 305
Tiber canalised, II. 111
town-hall banquets, I. 271
trees, that can be lopped, I. 49; consecrated, II. 87; catachanna, I. 140; II. 103; their growth (oak, fir, alder, cedar, pine, box, myrtle, etc.), I. 89 ff.; "happy" trees, H. 181; tree twisters, I. 71
tribune, action of, I. 215; tribunitia potestas, I. 221n.
trireme, I. 11
tropes, II. 87
truth, M. taught to tell the, I. 17
tyrant, Fronto on, II. 285
Tyrrhenian Sea, I. 34
U
Umbrian word, I. 44
urochs, II. 217
utterance, various words for perfect, II. 74
V
verse, of use in oratory (especially tragic verse, I. 107
verses in Fronto, see Ehrenthal, Quaest. Frontonianae
facti causa latet factum spectatur o-o, II. 215
sponte dei iuvisse volunt et dignum ope - - II. 32
modulatae I Vocis amatores primas audisse feruntur | aves, II. 72
cuius spes opesque omnes io vobis solis sunt sitae, I. 298
ut quisque a more quempiam deperit, eius etiam naevolos saviatur, II. 42
ager neglectus fructus uberes ferret, I. 46
trepidant et pavent, fugam frustra meditantur, II. 74
tantum profundi patiar, ne luna occidat
ventus lucernam ne interimat, ne quid tibi
e frigore impliciscat, ne fluctus (ne) vadus,
ne piscis aliqua noxsit - o - o - I. 222
neve motus venti cuncta funditus percellerent, II. 15
salvu' sator sit, salva si(e)nt sata, salva seges sit, II. 120
Atticis propinque thymum serpyllumque Hymettium, I. 304
verses by Fronto, II. 106, a line added to Lucan, and perhaps 2 Greek elegiacs? 1.94
on verse in prose see Brock, Studies in Fronto, 124
Verus, pun on name, I. 62
Vestal virgins, disqualification for, II. 73