We refer the reader for the above to the following works: See St. Augustine, De Civitate Dei, liber xi, cap.
Saint Augustine repeats the diamond myth in his De Civitate Dei, lib.
What can these men plead for themselves more than those heathen gods, the same cures done by both, the same spirit that seduceth; but read more of the Pagan god's effects in Austin de Civitate Dei, l.
He that is desirous to hear of this disease, or more examples, let him read Austin in his 18th book de Civitate Dei, cap.
Ludovicus Vives had intended to collect and arrange them, as we are informed in one of his notes to St Augustine, De Civitate Dei: But this task he did not live to accomplish(571).
Of these the chief is the treatise De Cultu Deorum, noticed by St Augustine in his seventh book, De Civitate Dei, where he says that Varro considers God to be not only the soul of the world, but the world itself.
The sixtieth book is a commentary on a part of Augustin de Civitate Dei.
But her first half-dozen words, the Erant in quadam civitate rex et regina, lift it in a moment into the fairy world of pure romance.
To the same class of officers belonged ‘Chumstinctius et Avectius tribuni ex civitate Nerviorum’, who played an important part in one of the campaigns of Drusus.
I walked there, then, one morning quite early on the upper terrace immediately under the castle wall, and alternately I read from the De Civitate Dei which I had brought with me, alternately mused upon the matter of my reading.
His De Civitate Dei and De Vita Beata were the paps at which I suckled my earliest mental nourishment.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "civitate" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.