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| Paragraph 1 |
We have said before what kind of thing 'solecism' is. |
| Paragraph 2 |
Almost all apparent solecisms depend upon the word 'this' (τόδε)
and upon occasions when the inflection denotes neither a masculine
nor a feminine object but a neuter. |
| Paragraph 3 |
It is clear, then, that for solecisms we must try to construct our
argument out of the aforesaid inflections. |
| Paragraph 4 |
These, then, are the types of contentious arguments, and the subdivisions
of those types, and the methods for conducting them aforesaid. |