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Alphabetical    [«  »]
twenty-three 1
twice 5
twins 1
two 36
typical 1
tyrannical 1
tyrannised 1
Frequency    [«  »]
36 light
36 make
36 though
36 two
36 without
35 my
34 because
François-Marie Arouet de Voltaire
Letters on the English or Lettres Philosophiques

IntraText - Concordances

two

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1 Int | refuge in England, and the two years spent there had great 2 I | Paul never baptised but two persons with water, and 3 I | scarlet, and wearing caps two foot high, enlist citizens 4 I | citizens by a noise made with two little sticks on an ass' 5 II | our women to hold forth. Two or three of these are often 6 III | brandy, died of an appolexy two days after, the moment he 7 IV | for his new dominions with two ships freighted with Quakers, 8 VI | Presbyterian sects are the two prevailing ones in Great 9 VI | arbitrary; if there were but two, the people would cut one 10 VII | thus: "Know that there are two ways by which men may be 11 VIII | resemblance. Besides, the two nations appear to me quite 12 IX | commoners in England amounts to two hundred thousand livres, 13 X | are masters of very near two hundred ships of war. Posterity 14 XII | not so much read as those two ingenious authors.~His History 15 XIV | be confessed that these two great men differed very 16 XIV | difference in the lives of these two great men is, that Sir Isaac, 17 XIV | far, as to declare that two and two make four for no 18 XIV | to declare that two and two make four for no other reason 19 XIV | had been infatuated for two thousand years. He taught 20 XV | contracted a degree of heat two thousand times stronger 21 XVI | of air necessary between two glasses, the one flat, the 22 XVII | divisible in infinitum. These two truths have been demonstrated 23 XVII | discovery, and the other two have the glory of having 24 XVII | a star. It has advanced two degrees of each since the 25 XVII | made to the present. Now two degrees are equivalent to 26 XVII | degrees are equivalent to two hundred years; consequently 27 XVIII| Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, two grave-diggers make a grave, 28 XVIII| whole volumes; but methinks two pages which display some 29 XVIII| have been made on those two great poets.~I have ventured 30 XXI | Dorset and Roscommon, the two Dukes of Buckingham, the 31 XXII | raillery. An agreeable tale of two pages is purchased at the 32 XXII | and Megrim at her head, Two handmaids wait the throne. 33 XXIII| immortality did not cost him two hundred thousand livres 34 XXIII| not prevent his gaining two hundred thousand livres 35 XXIV | and improved upon others.~Two things, and those the most 36 XXIV | gentleman perused one or two of them, but without being


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