Questions

This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.

identifier question
5983''Do you guarantee?''
5983''Do you pledge your credit?''
5983''Do you promise?''
5983''Will you convey?''
5983''Will you do?''
59831 In this contract the following forms of words were formerly sanctioned by usage:''Do you engage yourself to do so and so?''
598314 Again, a stipulation in the form:''Do you promise to give today, if such or such a ship arrives from Asia tomorrow?''
598315 A stipulation, say by Titius, in the form:''Do you promise to give when I shall die''or''when you shall die''?
59833 If the terms of your stipulation run''Do you promise to pay me ten aurei a year so long as I live?''
59835 It is usual in stipulations to name a place for payment; for instance,''Do you promise to give at Carthage?''
59835 The witnesses may all seal the testament with the same seal; for, as Pomponius remarks, what if the device on all seven seals were the same?
5983Accordingly the question arose, whether the assignment becomes void, if the parent subsequently emancipates the assignee?
5983Accordingly, if a man at Rome stipulates thus,''Do you promise to pay today at Carthage?''
5983An absolute stipulation may be exemplified by the following:''Do you promise to give five aurei?''
5983And what, if such person obtains a restoration after they have been actually adjudged in order to give effect to the bequest of freedom?
5983But if the stipulation runs:''Do you promise to give if I do not touch the sky with my finger?''
5983But what is to be said of a patron guardian?
5983Hence the question has arisen, can the daughter or son of a lunatic lawfully contract marriage?
5983How then will the case stand, if a man who dies intestate makes gifts of freedom by codicils, and on the intestacy no one accepts the inheritance?
5983If, however, a man stipulates in the form''Do you promise to give so and so, if I do not go up to the Capitol?''
5983OF ROBBERY Robbery is chargeable also as theft; for who deals with the property of another more against that other''s will than the robber?
5983Seius, do you promise to give the same five aurei?''
5983The usual form to constitute two or more joint promisors is as follows,--''Maevius, do you promise to give five aurei?
5983Thus, in the stipulation''Do you promise to give so and so, if Titius has been consul, or if Maevius is alive?''
38238And St. Ambrose:"For who does not consider an injury to the body, or the loss of patrimony, less than injury to the spirit or the loss of reputation?"
38238And was not that honour sufficiently avenged by the death of his wife?
38238And who can deny that he ought to be somewhat excused, if afterwards he took vengeance for such a violation?
38238And why can he not bring some other no less convincing proof, if honour urged Franceschini thereto?
38238And would he not even have had his wife declared an adulteress for the sake of gaining the dowry?
38238As soon as Signora Violante saw and heard this she took pity on me and exclaimed to the said Signori:"Where do you wish the poor thing to go now?"
38238But if you do[ not?]
38238But what did he do?
38238But what does not a man lose when he allows his wife to rule him?
38238December(?)
38238Did she acknowledge herself guilty of any sin, or of any wrong done to him in guarding her purity and modesty?
38238How then can these authorities be applied to our case?
38238How then may a man endure to leave adultery unavenged, which is known to have been committed to his eternal disgrace?
38238So in the present case, according to the same author:"By this young and passionate man is she supposed to have been returned still a virgin?"
38238Therefore you will not pass[?]
38238What did Franceschini answer?
38238What did he try to do, although he was armed with a sword against his defenceless wife and against Caponsacchi, who had with him only a little dagger?
38238What hinders me from laying you out here?
38238When his wife saw him, did she, timid as she was, shrink back?
38238Who indeed desires that anything else than justice be administered, and especially when dealing with poor imprisoned wretches?
38238Why did they, as I may say, cherish her in their breasts, not merely up till the birth of her child, but even till death?
38238Why imbrue himself straightway with the blood of Violante and Pietro, who were not accomplices in the pretended dishonour?