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| Alphabetical [« »] loses 10 losing 4 loss 22 lost 42 lot 1 loth 1 loubere 1 | Frequency [« »] 42 considering 42 express 42 liable 42 lost 42 operate 42 persons 42 reflect | John Locke An essay concerning human understanding IntraText - Concordances lost |
Book, Chapter
1 Read | good thoughts should be lost, have published their censures 2 I, II | companions—be altered or lost in us: and notwithstanding 3 I, III | it could not easily be lost again.~11. Idea of God not 4 I, III | I once talked with, who lost his sight by the small-pox 5 II, X | repeated again, are quite lost, without the least glimpse 6 II, X | who by some mischance have lost their sight when they were 7 II, X | repeated ideas can scarce be lost. But concerning the ideas 8 II, X | ideas, are seldom quite lost, whilst the mind retains 9 II, XI | not appear to me to have lost the faculty of reasoning, 10 II, XIV | at all, but it is quite lost to him; and the moment wherein 11 II, XIV | hours had been irrecoverably lost to them, and been for ever 12 II, XIV | the sense of succession is lost, even in cases where it 13 II, XIV | there the sense of motion is lost; and the body, though it 14 II, XIV | continued succession is lost, and we perceive it not, 15 II, XV | settled points, would be lost in them; and all things 16 II, XV | order of things would be lost, to our finite understandings, 17 II, XX | upon the thought of a good lost, which might have been enjoyed 18 II, XXI | do; and when happiness is lost, and misery overtakes him, 19 II, XXI | liberty in that case is lost, for I am under a necessity 20 II, XXIII| wherein as much motion is lost to one body as is got to 21 II, XXVII| consciousness, which it had lost for twenty years together. 22 II, XXIX | original exactness, or have lost any of their first freshness, 23 II, XXIX | different names, is quite lost.~7. Defaults which make 24 II, XXIX | be confounded, and almost lost in obscurity. For that idea 25 II, XXIX | progress of division, are quite lost; and of such minute parts 26 III, III | word essence has almost lost its primary signification: 27 III, IV | and even those who had lost their eyes could yet perceive 28 III, IV | which when he has quite lost, he is not apt to mistake 29 III, V | been never made, or quite lost, we might, no doubt, have 30 III, VI | colours, and he that has lost his smell as well distinguish 31 III, VI | committing disloyalty), lost not their distinct significations. 32 III, IX | consulting commentators, quite lost the sense of it, and by 33 III, IX | though to us now they are lost and unknown; it would become 34 IV, II | knowledge. If the eyes have lost the faculty of seeing, or 35 IV, III | thing, that I conclude it lost labour to seek after it.~ 36 IV, III | whilst students, being lost in the great wood of words, 37 IV, XII | that, were the use of iron lost among us, we should in a 38 IV, XVII | native state would be quite lost, if this argument were managed 39 IV, XVII | whole strength of it is lost, and it hath no force to 40 IV, XVIII| against God, and thereby lost their first happy state: 41 IV, XIX | them out of it. Reason is lost upon them, they are above 42 IV, XX | day-labourer be unavoidably lost, because he had the ill-luck