![]() ![]() This is not an error, but the first one is documenting the first ne in the line, and the second documenting the second. Ne: 6:832: ne, pueri, ne tanta animis adsuescite bella Accordingly you may find two identical lines in a row, e.g.: Perhaps more interestingly, I’m not sure what the conventions are for words repeated in a given line, but this concordance will give each a separate entry. There may be an occasional bit that got by indexed oddly, due (almost certainly) to deficiencies in my own regular expression formation, though I tried to eliminate them by scrutinizing the resultant files by hand. There are a few peculiarities in consequence. The concordance was generated by mechanical means (who would do it by hand nowadays?) using a sequence of grep functions with Bare Bones’ BBEdit program. If it duplicates someone else’s efforts, I apologize. I prepared it because a fairly cursory search online showed nothing like it that was complete, and I wanted to have this information available for my own research. The text is taken from that at the Latin Library site, which is in the public domain it has been modified to normalize orthography in a few places. This is a minimal concordance without any morphological analysis, providing each form of each word in the context of its line. ![]()
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