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Alphabetical    [«  »]
haute 1
hauteurs 1
have 215
having 44
havoc 1
hazard 1
he 344
Frequency    [«  »]
46 never
46 reason
44 first
44 having
42 et
42 several
42 us
François-Marie Arouet de Voltaire
Letters on the English or Lettres Philosophiques

IntraText - Concordances

having

   Letter
1 I | Quakers in England, who, after having traded thirty years, had 2 III | take the oaths. Oliver, having as great a contempt for 3 IV | and naturally eloquent, having a winning aspect, and a 4 IV | embarked for Holland, after having left labourers sufficient 5 IV | William Penn might glory in having brought down upon earth 6 IV | possess at this time. Penn having at last seen Quakerism firmly 7 IV | happy but himself. After having resided some years in Pennsylvania 8 VII | empires. Arianism, after having triumphed during three centuries, 9 X | order to succour Savoy. Having no money, without which 10 XI | philosopher on the throne, having never let slip one opportunity 11 XI | small-pox prevented their ever having that distemper in a natural 12 XII | true greatness consists in having received from heaven a mighty 13 XII | a mighty genius, and in having employed it to enlighten 14 XII | Bolingbroke was appealed to (who, having been in the opposite party, 15 XIII | altar was erected for his having taught mankind that the 16 XIII | cynical philosopher after having coined base money) declared 17 XIII | adventure of the crusade having a little sunk the credit 18 XIII | a multitude of reasoners having written the romance of the 19 XIII | perfectly.~Mr. Locke, after having destroyed innate ideas; 20 XIII | destroyed innate ideas; after having fully renounced the vanity 21 XIII | that we think always; after having laid down, from the most 22 XIII | mind through the senses; having examined our simple and 23 XIII | simple and complex ideas; having traced the human mind through 24 XIII | its several operations; having shown that all the languages 25 XIV | him no better; and who, having a nearer view of his glory, 26 XIV | the Inquisition, only for having demonstrated the earth's 27 XV | banished from the world.~Having by these and several other 28 XV | swells and sinks.~After having shown by his sublime theory 29 XV | Sir Isaac Newton, after having demonstrated the existence 30 XVI | of bodies, every particle having its pores, and every particle 31 XVI | particle of those particles having its own, he shows we are 32 XVI | conceiving what matter is. Having thus divided, as it were, 33 XVII | other two have the glory of having once made the world doubt 34 XVII | each other the honour of having first seen the vermiculi 35 XVII | from Menes to Sethon; and, having no fixed era, they supposed 36 XVII | the same man the glory of having improved natural philosophy, 37 XVIII| but his great fault is his having endeavoured to be universal.~ 38 XIX | go and fight the Dutch, having left all his money, his 39 XIX | over natural.~The captain having blown up his own ship in 40 XIX | load in thee."~Sir John having taken a tour into France 41 XXIII| they object to in us, for having buried Mademoiselle Le Couvreur 42 XXIV | is, that the member elect having assured the audience that 43 XXIV | something, the perplexity of having nothing to say, and a desire 44 XXIV | discovered America without having the least idea of the property


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