- ROMANS
- Caesar and friends
- Book after Acts
- The first Epistle
- Colosseum crowd
- Ovid's audience
- Those whose customs you should follow, it's said
- Book after the Acts of the Apostles
- Et tu? sayer et al.
- Caesar's subjects
- Friends, ___, countrymen
- Nero and Caesar
- Circus Maximus attendees
- Appian Way builders
- With friends and countrymen, Marc Antony's audience
- Caesar, Cassius and others
- Cassius and Claudius
- Paul's Epistle
- Appian Way travelers
- Caesar and Brutus
- Friends-countrymen link
- Many Shakespearean characters
- Citizens under Caesar
- Ben-Hur extras
- Punic Wars fighters
- Acts follower
- Marc Antony and Julius Caesar
- Four of the Bard's title characters
- They wrote in Latin
- Julius Caesar's followers
- Some of Antony's addressees
- Foes of the 65 Across
- People from Italy's capital
- Group addressed by Antony
- Book of the Bible.
- Bible book after Acts
- Residents of bombed city.
- Italians.
- Caesar, Nero and Cato.
- Epistle to the ___.
- After "The Acts."
- Antony's audience.
- New Testament book.
- New Testament epistle.
- Biblical book.
- People on the Corso.
- Brutus and Cassius.
- Partners of friends and countrymen
- After Acts
- Horace and Pliny, e.g.
- Shoppers on the Corso
- Epistle recipients
- Cato, Ovid et al.
- Dwellers in the Eternal City
- St. Paul's book
- Friends follower
- Epistle of the New Testament
- Foes of Carthage
- Residents of the Eternal City
- Eternal City citizens
- Julius Caesar and Augustus, for two
- If God be for us, who can be against us? source
- Certain Italians
- Paul's longest letter
- Octavia and Claudius
- Residents of Italy's capital
- Bible book
- Julius Caesar crowd
- The wages of sin is death source
- Friends, ___, countrymen, lend me your ears ("Julius Caesar" quote)
- Chariot race spectators