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| Alphabetical [« »] utterly 15 utters 1 v 8 v.g. 87 vacancies 1 vacant 1 vacuum 23 | Frequency [« »] 87 precise 87 understood 87 universal 87 v.g. 86 children 86 did 85 infinity | John Locke An essay concerning human understanding IntraText - Concordances v.g. |
Book, Chapter
1 II, I | the body of another man, v.g. Pollux, who is sleeping 2 II, VIII | words denote positive ideas, v.g. taste, sound, being, with 3 II, VIII | perceived by our senses: v.g. Take a grain of wheat, divide 4 II, VIII | colours and smells of bodies; v.g. that a violet, by the impulse 5 II, VIII | esteemed barely powers. v.g. The idea of heat or light, 6 II, IX | globe of any uniform colour, v.g. gold, alabaster, or jet, 7 II, XII | to make one complex one;—v.g. beauty, consisting of a 8 II, XIV | train of successive ideas: v.g. a man becalmed at sea, out 9 II, XIV | of something last night, v.g. the burning of a candle, 10 II, XVIII | language, are not understood: v.g. coltshire, drilling, filtration, 11 II, XXI | is free, and no further: v.g. I have the ability to move 12 II, XXI | that is called action: v.g. a solid substance, by motion, 13 II, XXI | not always signify action: v.g. this proposition: I see 14 II, XXII | fitted for those actions: v.g. boldness is the power to 15 II, XXII | examine any modes of action, v.g. consideration and assent, 16 II, XXII | on, or cause operating: v.g. creation, annihilation, 17 II, XXIII | names, signify to others, v.g. man, horse, sun, water, 18 II, XXIII | other idea of any substance, v.g. let it be gold, horse, iron, 19 II, XXIII | qualities do it immediately: v.g. we immediately by our senses 20 II, XXIII | receive from reflection: v.g. having, from what we experiment 21 II, XXIII | for positive qualities; v.g. the greatest part of the 22 II, XXIV | joined are looked on as one; v.g. the idea of such a collection 23 II, XXV | really exists in Caius; v.g. when I consider him as a 24 II, XXV | that are thus compared: v.g. those who have far different 25 II, XXV | itself no alteration at all: v.g. Caius, whom I consider to-day 26 II, XXV | denominations at the same time: v.g. Caius, compared to several 27 II, XXV | men’s thoughts and words: v.g. one single man may at once 28 II, XXV | on, or have a name for: v.g. comparing two men in reference 29 II, XXV | applied are relative words: v.g. a man, black, merry, thoughtful, 30 II, XXVI | have no such signification: v.g. the ship has necessary stores. 31 II, XXVII | actions of finite beings, v.g. motion and thought, both 32 II, XXVII | taken to what it is applied: v.g. let us suppose an atom, 33 II, XXVIII| respect of that simple idea, v.g. whiter, sweeter, equal, 34 II, XXVIII| subjects to which they belong, v.g. father and son, brothers, 35 II, XXVIII| is commonly overlooked: v.g. a patron and client ire 36 II, XXVIII| substances, where one name, v.g. man, is used to signify 37 II, XXVIII| signify the thing; another, v.g. father, to signify the relation.~ 38 II, XXVIII| seldom taken notice of: v.g. when the word father is 39 II, XXIX | belong than to some other: v.g. when it is said to be the 40 II, XXX | together in any substance: v.g. a rational creature, consisting 41 II, XXXII | by the same common name; v.g. when the mind intends or 42 II, XXXII | ideas at the same time; v.g. if the idea that a violet 43 II, XXXII | which really it is not; v.g. having joined the ideas 44 II, XXXII | by the idea he has of it: v.g. when I frame an idea of 45 III, I | cognizance of our senses; v.g. to imagine, apprehend, comprehend, 46 III, IV | genus of the other two: v.g. there is nothing that can 47 III, VI | called the real essence: v.g. the nominal essence of gold 48 III, VI | and not to individuals: v.g. supposing the nominal essence 49 III, VI | particular piece of matter; v.g. the last guinea that was 50 III, VIII | frequent are of powers: v.g. “a man is white,” signifies 51 III, X | another collection of units: v.g. this character 3, stand 52 III, X | would express by it?~18. V.g. Putting them for the real 53 III, X | parcel in the body itself, v.g. a piece of leaf-gold laid 54 III, X | the former inconveniences: v.g. he that uses the word tarantula, 55 III, X | names that belong to them: v.g. I may have the idea of a 56 III, X | also, but apply them amiss: v.g. when I apply the name frugality 57 III, XI | inquired into as supposed: v.g. when we say that man is 58 IV, II | of the ideas themselves: v.g. a man that has as clear 59 IV, III | some perceptions, such as, v.g., pleasure and pain, should 60 IV, III | so co-existing together; v.g. our idea of flame is a body 61 IV, III | one particular at once: v.g. each particular extension, 62 IV, III | all other of that sort: v.g. no one subject can have 63 IV, IV | did never before so exist: v.g. the ideas of sacrilege or 64 IV, V | certain number of equal parts: v.g. into five, ten, a hundred, 65 IV, VI | which we know not, is, v.g. in what parcels of matter 66 IV, VI | certainty be made concerning it: v.g. could any one discover a 67 IV, VI | have any certain connexion: v.g. let the ideas to which we 68 IV, VII | or such as are less so: v.g. whether the general idea 69 IV, VII | though some there are: v.g. the idea of filling a place 70 IV, VII | to prove contradictions: v.g. he that with Descartes shall 71 IV, VII | standing for complex ideas, v.g. man, horse, gold, virtue; 72 IV, VIII | thing in the world thereby; v.g. “what is a soul, is a soul,”; 73 IV, VIII | affirmed of the term man:—v.g. suppose a Roman signified 74 IV, VIII | supposed to know before: v.g. a triangle hath three sides, 75 IV, VIII | of the truth of things: v.g. he that having learnt these 76 IV, VIII | acceptations annexed to them: v.g. substance, man, animal, 77 IV, VIII | that term, are only verbal: v.g. to say that gold is a metal, 78 IV, XI | wherein they are produced: v.g. whilst I write this, I have, 79 IV, XI | however true it may be, v.g., that all the intelligent 80 IV, XII | those of my complex idea, v.g. whether that yellow, heavy, 81 IV, XVI | and undoubted witnesses: v.g. history giving us such an 82 IV, XVII | the inferred proposition. V.g. Let this be the proposition 83 IV, XVII | or proposition inferred? V.g. “Men shall be punished”; “ 84 IV, XVIII | disagreement of our own ideas: v.g. if it were revealed some 85 IV, XVIII | knowable by our senses; v.g. the history of the deluge 86 IV, XVIII | and distinct knowledge; v.g. the ideas of one body and 87 IV, XX | inquiry is to be learned, v.g. whether there was one thousand