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| Alphabetical [« »] agree 115 agreeable 9 agreeableness 3 agreed 29 agreeing 12 agreement 176 agreements 5 | Frequency [« »] 29 17 29 agent 29 ages 29 agreed 29 arguments 29 choose 29 cold | John Locke An essay concerning human understanding IntraText - Concordances agreed |
Book, Chapter
1 Read | assented; and thereupon it was agreed that this should be our 2 Read | vice, yet we are better agreed than he thinks in what he 3 I, I | speak of both), universally agreed upon by all mankind: which 4 I, I | truths wherein all mankind agreed, it would not prove them 5 I, III | universally known and naturally agreed on, they cannot be subjects 6 I, III | since those people who agreed in the name, had, at the 7 II, XXVII | privately, and both of them agreed in telling him just the 8 II, XXVII | wherein perhaps few are agreed, personal identity can by 9 II, XXVIII| relation; and that they agreed in that circumstance of 10 II, XXXI | denominate actions by, as they agreed to it. This idea, thus made 11 III, I | when they had got known and agreed names to signify those internal 12 III, IV | definition is. I think it is agreed, that a definition is nothing 13 III, IV | excellency of it. The painter agreed to refer himself to the 14 III, V | particulars, as far forth as they agreed to that abstract idea, might 15 III, VI | are far enough from having agreed on the precise number of 16 III, VI | discourse of things, as they agreed in the complex idea of extension 17 III, VI | already established and agreed on, they were obliged to 18 III, IX | this, that they are not agreed in the signification of 19 III, IX | make them up are not easily agreed, so readily kept in mind. 20 III, X | put black, which is a word agreed on to stand for one sensible 21 III, X | A, which is a character agreed on to stand for one modification 22 III, X | speech, for B, which is agreed on to stand for another 23 III, X | constant regular marks of agreed notions, which in truth 24 III, XI | For if the idea be not agreed on, betwixt the speaker 25 III, XI | one of another. Were they agreed in the signification of 26 III, XI | words, whose meaning is not agreed between them, out of a mistake 27 IV, I | always true; what ideas once agreed will always agree; and consequently 28 IV, III | for not being so easily agreed on; and so the sign that 29 IV, VII | such as all men allowed and agreed in, were looked on as general