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| Alphabetical [« »] date 2 daughter 3 dawning 1 day 38 day-labourer 1 daylight 5 days 27 | Frequency [« »] 38 child 38 coming 38 confess 38 day 38 difficulty 38 following 38 lives | John Locke An essay concerning human understanding IntraText - Concordances day |
Book, Chapter
1 Ded | witnesses of, and every day tell me I am indebted to 2 I, II | which is a book not every day to be met with, I shall 3 I, II | seem, is that which every day’s experience confirms; and 4 I, III | to judgment, at the last day, the very same persons, 5 II, I | may come in his way every day; but yet he will have but 6 II, I | for several hours every day, think of something, which 7 II, VIII | particles, both night and day, as are apt, by the rays 8 II, IX | How frequently do we, in a day, cover our eyes with our 9 II, XIV | soundly, whether an hour or a day, a month or a year; of which 10 II, XIV | sight of land, in a fair day, may look on the sun, or 11 II, XIV | of time that it now every day comes about to the same 12 II, XIV | The notion of an hour, day, or year, being only the 13 II, XIV | that is but a minute or a day antecedent to the motion 14 II, XIV | motion, a minute, an hour, a day, a year, or one thousand 15 II, XV | length of an hour and a day, as of an inch and a foot.~ 16 II, XVII | as those of a yard or a day? To which I answer,—All 17 II, XXI | got. The mind being every day informed, by the senses, 18 II, XXIII| what they think they every day observe. Do we not see ( 19 II, XXIII| other of our minds, every day’s experience clearly furnishes 20 II, XXIII| whereas the mind every day affords us ideas of an active 21 II, XXVII| of creation the seventh day, think his soul hath existed 22 II, XXVII| for him. But in the Great Day, wherein the secrets of 23 II, XXVII| body, the one constantly by day, the other by night; and, 24 II, XXVII| first case, whether the day and the night—man would 25 II, XXVII| their turns regularly by day and night, and you have 26 II, XXVII| tells us, that, at the great day, when every one shall “receive 27 II, XXIX | is from the length of a day or an hour. For nothing 28 II, XXXII| by his senses and every day’s observation, may easily 29 III, IV | tennis-balls, which fairies all day long struck with rackets 30 III, IV | in his way, bragged one day, That he now understood 31 III, X | the arguings one may every day observe in conversation 32 IV, II | when he looks on the sun by day, and thinks on it by night; 33 IV, III | Several effects come every day within the notice of our 34 IV, XIII | if he will open them by day, cannot but see some objects 35 IV, XIV | presumption, we might, by every day’s experience, be made sensible 36 IV, XIV | rewards at the close of the day, when their sun shall set 37 IV, XVI | that he embraces, every day to examine the proofs: both 38 IV, XVII | abroad thin clad in such a day, after a fever: she clearly