Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
poor 2
pope 2
popes 1
popular 31
popularity 1
popules 1
populi 1
Frequency    [«  »]
31 liberty
31 love
31 otherwise
31 popular
31 practice
31 put
31 side
Francis Bacon
The advancement of learning

IntraText - Concordances

popular

   Book, Chapter
1 1, III | with true measure, but with popular estimation and conceit, 2 1, IV | fall under or near unto a popular observation.~(2) There be 3 1, IV | knowledge must fall under popular contempt, the people being 4 1, IV | but that they fall under a popular observation and traducement, 5 1, V | rather to that which is popular and superficial than to 6 1, VII | governors in commonwealths and popular estates, are endued with 7 1, VII | set on as he passed by in popular acclamation to salute him 8 1, VIII | of a number of the like popular judgments. For these things 9 2, I | rejection of fables and popular errors. For as things now 10 2, VIII | material which is a calendar of popular errors: I mean chiefly in 11 2, XIII | is true that in sciences popular, as moralities, laws, and 12 2, XIII | current tokens or marks of popular notions of things; which 13 2, XVI | of two natures: the one popular, which is for the speedy 14 2, XVII | whose conceits are seated in popular opinions need only but to 15 2, XVII | whose conceits are beyond popular opinions, have a double 16 2, XVIII| whose conceits are seated in popular opinions need only but to 17 2, XVIII| whose conceits are beyond popular opinions, have a double 18 2, XX | do) against corrupt and popular opinions. Again, for the 19 2, XX | before they had come to the popular and received notions of 20 2, XXII | the ancient politiques in popular estates were wont to compare 21 2, XXII | in state and majesty, and popular opinions against virtue 22 2, XXIII| direction in the case of popular elections. But chiefly we 23 2, XXIII| histories of lives is the most popular for discourse of business, 24 2, XXIII| anything that was gracious and popular, he saith, “That in other 25 2, XXIII| begun towards a civil and popular greatness, and transferred 26 2, XXIII| to princes, others with popular fame and applause, supposing 27 2, XXIII| direction in the case of popular elections. But chiefly we 28 2, XXIII| histories of lives is the most popular for discourse of business, 29 2, XXIII| anything that was gracious and popular, he saith, “That in other 30 2, XXIII| begun towards a civil and popular greatness, and transferred 31 2, XXIII| to princes, others with popular fame and applause, supposing


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