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Alphabetical    [«  »]
namely 1
names 2
narrow 1
nation 28
nations 12
native 8
natives 1
Frequency    [«  »]
28 french
28 l
28 letter
28 nation
28 part
28 themselves
28 think
François-Marie Arouet de Voltaire
Letters on the English or Lettres Philosophiques

IntraText - Concordances

nation

   Letter
1 I | that in Christ's time no nation was so ridiculous as to 2 V | a twentieth part of the nation is out of the pale of the 3 VI | that day; the rest of the nation go either to church, to 4 VIII | executioners, and the rest of the nation kiss the chains they are 5 VIII | chiefly reproach the English nation is the murder of King Charles 6 IX | victorious was to suck. Every nation, instead of being governed 7 IX | but then the rest of the nation were a little favoured in 8 IX | the king, then the whole nation pays, every man in proportion 9 X | which is most useful to a nation; a lord, powdered in the 10 XI | Persia and Turkey.~A trading nation is always watchful over 11 XI | Constantinople to Paris, the nation would have been for ever 12 XI | kind of people. Perhaps our nation will imitate ten years hence 13 XVII | there is no family, city, or nation, but endeavours to remove 14 XVII | kings had reigned over a nation; such a historian would 15 XVIII| Corneille of the first-mentioned nation, was pretty nearly contemporary 16 XIX | of the polite part of the nation. His dramatic pieces, which 17 XIX | ridiculous foibles of a nation; so that he only is able 18 XX | the same honour. The whole nation set themselves up as judges 19 XXII | for, as to the rest of the nation, they laugh at the pleasant 20 XXII | historians. One half of the nation is always at variance with 21 XXII | are worthy writers of our nation, and therefore we ought ( 22 XXIII| more to the honour of the nation. The English have so great 23 XXIII| the greatest men in the nation disputing who should have 24 XXIII| which the gratitude of the nation has erected to perpetuate 25 XXIII| action those pieces which the nation is proud of.~Under the reign 26 XXIII| must they entertain of our nation? And how will it be possible 27 XXIV | to the language, and the nation, if, instead of publishing 28 XXIV | most glorious monuments the nation could boast. I have been


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