Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
falsehood 51
falsely 1
falseness 1
familiar 47
familiarity 2
familiarly 7
familiars 1
Frequency    [«  »]
47 appearances
47 appears
47 avoid
47 familiar
47 fire
47 self-evident
47 train
John Locke
An essay concerning human understanding

IntraText - Concordances

familiar

   Book,  Chapter
1 Read | pains to make plain and familiar to their thoughts some truths 2 Read | are terms which, though familiar and frequent in men’s mouths, 3 I, I | exercised their reason about familiar and more particular ideas, 4 I, I | mind by degrees growing familiar with some of them, they 5 I, I | apple is not fire,” when by familiar acquaintance he has got 6 I, II | assistance or pity. It is familiar among the Mingrelians, a 7 I, II | we remember that it was a familiar and uncondemned practice 8 II, I | the ideas of obvious and familiar qualities imprint themselves 9 II, I | objects which, being most familiar with it, have made lasting 10 II, IX | the ideas that are most familiar at first, being various 11 II, XI | things present, and very familiar to their senses. And indeed 12 II, XIII | measures of space are made familiar to men’s thoughts, they 13 II, XV | common measures, which, by familiar use in each country, have 14 II, XXII | several combinations of ideas familiar and necessary in one, which 15 II, XXII | modes, marked by names, and familiar in the minds and mouths 16 II, XXVIII| the commerce of thoughts familiar amongst them; and not to 17 II, XXIX | they have particular and familiar names. For, being satisfied 18 II, XXIX | clear; and the name which is familiar to us, being applied to 19 III, II | speaker, yet, because by familiar use from our cradles, we 20 III, II | connexion. Words, by long and familiar use, as has been said, come 21 III, III | proper names for the one, as familiar as for the other, and Bucephalus 22 III, III | that species which is most familiar to us, and with which we 23 III, III | essence imports in its most familiar use.~These two sorts of 24 III, VI | understanding. Though the familiar use of things about us take 25 III, VI | ice and water, in a very familiar example. A silent and a 26 III, VI | it is difficult by known familiar names to do this, give me 27 III, VI | kinneah and niouph, in familiar use, could not take them 28 III, VII | is a particle, none more familiar in our language: and he 29 III, VIII | humanitas was a word in familiar use amongst the Romans; 30 III, IX | controversial debate, or familiar discourse, concerning honour, 31 III, X | their errors, comes, by familiar use amongst those of the 32 III, X | one only, and that a very familiar one. How many intricate 33 III, X | sure, that, by constant and familiar use, they charm men into 34 III, X | that there is nothing more familiar. When a man asks whether 35 III, X | men having by a long and familiar use annexed to them certain 36 III, X | Life is a term, none more familiar. Any one almost would take 37 III, XI | common use, in a language familiar to him. But common use being 38 IV, V | of the mind, which is so familiar to every thinking and reasoning 39 IV, VII | taken from the ordinary and familiar objects of sense, are settled 40 IV, VII | because by constant and familiar use they are made so. For, 41 IV, VII | abstract being the most familiar, and the easier and earlier 42 IV, VII | instances, that were not so familiar to their minds as those 43 IV, VII | confirm; but that, being more familiar to the mind, the very naming 44 IV, VII | propositions as it can, makes those familiar to its thoughts, and accustoms 45 IV, VII | and falsehood. By which familiar use of them, as rules to 46 IV, XII | were pursued in the way familiar to mathematicians, they 47 IV, XX | understood. There is nothing more familiar than this. The instances


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