


| Location | Text | Standardized Text | Parts of Speech |
|---|---|---|---|
| In-Text | and the reason Lombard gives, Quia omnia potest, quae posse, potentiae est, et inde dicitur Omnipotens, in the first booke of his sentences, 42. distinction. | and the reason Lombard gives, Quia omnia potest, Quae posse, potentiae est, et inde dicitur Omnipotens, in the First book of his sentences, 42. distinction. | cc dt n1 np1 vvz, fw-la fw-la fw-la, fw-la fw-la, fw-la fw-la, fw-la fw-la fw-la fw-la, p-acp dt ord n1 pp-f po31 n2, crd n1. |



| Verse & Version | Verse Text | Text | Is a Partial Textual Segment/Note | Cosine Similarity Score | Cross Encoder Score | Okapi BM25 Score |
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| Location | Phrase | Citations | Outliers |
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