Erant praetereaalii haeretici, says Robert Monachus in the passage above quoted, qui Waldenses dicebantur, a quodam Waldio nomine Lugdunensi.
Praeterea in quibusdam morbis medendi cruciatus detraxit, ut in anginis quas curabant in fauces organo demisso.
Lucretius gives the same account of it: Est Elephas morbus, qui, propter flumina Nili Gignitur, Aegypto in media, neque praeterea usquam.
The only mention of Tuticanus is at the poem's beginning: Haec tibi mittuntur quem sum modo carmine questus non aptum numeris nomen habere meis, in quibus, excepto quod adhuc utcumque ualemus, nil te praeterea quod iuuet inuenies.
The publicans only retained them, and even they in the end were satisfied with the name without the sign, vox etpraeterea nihil.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "praeterea" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.