[*] 131.2. Cenimagni, etc.: these were petty populations of the vicinity. [*] 131.4. oppidum Cassivellauni: thought to be the modern St. Albans. [*] 131.6. oppidum, etc.: the Britons, like the Germans, did not live in towns but used these strongholds simply for defence against attack. [*] 131.7. cum, whenever, another general condition; cf. 130 7 and note. The preceding case refers to repeated action in past time, this to the present of a general truth. Notice the difference between these cases and the regular descriptive cum in narration. [*] 131.9. consuerunt: what tense in translation? [*] 131.14. multi: i.e. the people, not the cattle.
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BOOK FIRST. — B.C. 58.
book 2
BOOK THIRD. — B.C. 56.
BOOK FOURTH. — B.C. 55.
BOOK FIFTH.—B.C. 54.
BOOK VI. BOOK SIXTH.—B.C. 53.
BOOK SEVENTH.—B.C. 52.
Caesar's Gallic War. J. B. Greenough, Benjamin L. D'Ooge and M. Grant Daniell. Boston. Ginn and Company. 1898.
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