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Alphabetical    [«  »]
thought 297
thoughtful 1
thoughts 330
thousand 37
thousands 2
thousandth 1
threatened 1
Frequency    [«  »]
37 grounds
37 reasonings
37 sleep
37 thousand
37 whiteness
37 your
36 afford
John Locke
An essay concerning human understanding

IntraText - Concordances

thousand

   Book,  Chapter
1 I, I | is not bitterness,” and a thousand the like, must be innate. 2 I, II | and allow all these and a thousand other such rules, all of 3 I, III | very few, perhaps one of a thousand, this universality is very 4 II, XIII | book itself hath moved a thousand times, the use of the idea 5 II, XIV | Abraham was born in the two thousand seven hundred and twelfth 6 II, XIV | they make the world one thousand years older, since every 7 II, XIV | hour, a day, a year, or one thousand years. For, if I can but 8 II, XVII | this line be ten, or ten thousand fathoms long, it equally 9 II, XVII | of ten, one hundred, one thousand, or any other number of 10 II, XVII | may have the idea of ten thousand miles square, without any 11 II, XVII | well as the idea of ten thousand years, without any body 12 II, XXI | have settled in us, and a thousand other irregular desires, 13 II, XXIII | doubt not, but there are a thousand changes, that bodies we 14 II, XXIII | could yet magnify them a thousand or ten thousand times more, 15 II, XXIII | magnify them a thousand or ten thousand times more, is uncertain.~ 16 II, XXIII | sense of hearing were but a thousand times quicker than it is, 17 II, XXIII | seeing, were in any man a thousand or a hundred thousand times 18 II, XXIII | a thousand or a hundred thousand times more acute than it 19 II, XXIII | may frame creatures with a thousand other faculties and ways 20 II, XXIII | that have magnified to ten thousand; nay, to much above a hundred 21 II, XXIII | to much above a hundred thousand times), pretended to perceive 22 II, XXIV | conceive how an army of ten thousand men should make one idea, 23 II, XXVII | any action that was done a thousand years since, appropriated 24 II, XXVIII| Nor is there one of ten thousand, who is stiff and insensible 25 II, XXIX | chiliaedron, or a body of a thousand sides, the ideas of the 26 II, XXIX | depends upon the number of thousand, he is apt to think he has 27 III, V | their ideas? What one of a thousand ever frames the abstract 28 III, XI | of the animals doth it a thousand times better. And the idea 29 IV, V | five, ten, a hundred, a thousand, or any other number, and 30 IV, VII | will be equal.” These and a thousand other such propositions 31 IV, XI | his existence now: by a thousand ways he may cease to be, 32 IV, XVI | as Rome: that about one thousand seven hundred years ago, 33 IV, XVI | growing older; and what a thousand years since would not, to 34 IV, XVI | mistake of his meaning, and a thousand odd reasons, or capricios, 35 IV, XVII | there is not one of ten thousand that doth.~Aristotle. But 36 IV, XVII | who are not one of ten thousand) who perfectly understand 37 IV, XX | v.g. whether there was one thousand seven hundred years ago


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