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I checked and I was not able to right/left arrow over from "ventus" in another dictionary to "uentus" in OLD. My Dictionary of the Vulgate New Testament has the entry "uentus," so I could arrow over to and from OLD for that entry. My Elementary Latin Dictionary , which has "ventus," would not go to OLD "uentus."
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OHHHH.... I see now. Thank you. This solves my "problem."
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I will attach a screenshot. The U and V entries are indeed separate. The problem I am having is that the V entries are limited to capitalized words (mostly proper names but also, for instance, adjectives based on a name). I have tried to type in various words to search for entries that should be there (ventus, for instance), and the entry is simply
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Has anyone else purchased the Oxford Latin Dictionary, 2nd edition, and found that it is incomplete? For example, the only entries under "V" are proper names. I emailed Logos support a long while back (perhaps two years or more ago) and was told that they were working on it.
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Never mind, I think I have figured it out.
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How do I run a command prompt?
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I figured out how to do the search. If anyone is curious how to do it, I have attached a screenshot of what the search should look like. It just took me a while to figure out how to recreate the order I saw in the opentext clause annotation. One of the more difficult things for me to figure out was how to organize the subsequent clause components after
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I could use some help. I am trying to do a syntax search in the opentext.org database for a specific clausal word order. The primary clause from 1 Cor. 14:18 in the upper right of the screenshot I have attached is the pattern I would like to search. That is, I want to see if there are other instances in the NT where a definer is followed by a qualifier