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| Alphabetical [« »] hora 1 horace 1 horizon 1 horse 40 horses 7 hospitals 2 hot 7 | Frequency [« »] 40 contained 40 divine 40 established 40 horse 40 naturally 40 reality 40 seen | John Locke An essay concerning human understanding IntraText - Concordances horse |
Book, Chapter
1 II, XXIII | have the ideas of a man, horse, gold, water, &c.; of which 2 II, XXIII | corporeal substances, as horse, stone, &c., though the 3 II, XXIII | united in the thing called horse or stone; yet, because we 4 II, XXIII | signify to others, v.g. man, horse, sun, water, iron: upon 5 II, XXIII | substance, v.g. let it be gold, horse, iron, man, vitriol, bread, 6 II, XXIII | London, as the coach or horse does that carries him, and 7 II, XXIV | single substances, as of man, horse, gold, violet, apple, &c., 8 II, XXVI | seven years old: but yet a horse we call old at twenty, and 9 II, XXVI | been used to; and a little horse, such a one as comes not 10 II, XXVI | and that will be a great horse to a Welchman, which is 11 II, XXVII | and a colt grown up to a horse, sometimes fat, sometimes 12 II, XXVII | is all the while the same horse: though, in both these cases, 13 II, XXVII | and the other the same horse. The reason whereof is, 14 II, XXVIII| so much as the name for a horse; and in others, where they 15 II, XXVIII| ideas, as the drinking of a horse, or speaking of a parrot. 16 II, XXX | creature, consisting of a horse’s head, joined to a body 17 II, XXXII | that exist together in a horse, is joined in the same complex 18 II, XXXII | called a false idea of a horse. (2) Ideas of substances 19 II, XXXII | man, and join to this a horse’s head and neck, I do not 20 III, III | this or that particular horse when he is out of sight.~ 21 III, III | and Paul, or his idea of horse from that of Bucephalus, 22 III, III | signified by the names man and horse, leaving out but those particulars 23 III, III | say this is a man, that a horse; this justice, that cruelty; 24 III, III | or may not be made in a horse or lead, without making 25 III, III | to be of the species of a horse or lead.~14. Each distinct 26 III, III | the ideas to which man and horse are annexed, are supposed 27 III, III | and permanent as that of a horse. From what has been said, 28 III, V | they do when we speak of a horse, or iron, whose specific 29 III, VI | Why do we say this is a horse, and that a mule; this is 30 III, VI | sheep with the shape of a horse; nor the colour of lead 31 III, VI | think that a man, and a horse, and an animal, and a plant, & 32 III, VI | animal, and another for a horse; and all these essences 33 III, VI | species one from another, as a horse and a dog; they being expressed 34 III, IX | or ought to be called a horse, or antimony, when those 35 III, X | true ideas of them, as of a horse or a stag; but can speak 36 III, X | He that gives the name horse to that idea which common 37 III, XI | otherwise. For the shape of a horse or cassowary will be but 38 IV, VII | from it, as “a man is not a horse”; “red is not blue.” The 39 IV, VII | complex ideas, v.g. man, horse, gold, virtue; there they 40 IV, VIII | a palfrey is an ambling horse, or a neighing, ambling