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Alphabetical    [«  »]
age 26
agent 29
agents 17
ages 29
aggregate 3
agitate 1
agitated 3
Frequency    [«  »]
30 whenever
29 17
29 agent
29 ages
29 agreed
29 arguments
29 choose
John Locke
An essay concerning human understanding

IntraText - Concordances

ages

   Book,  Chapter
1 Read | those subjects having in all ages exercised the learned part 2 I, II | observed in all persons and all ages, steady and universal; but 3 I, III | though they lived several ages asunder? Nay, whether the 4 I, III | discovered, in these later ages, whole nations, at the bay 5 II, XI | of men in their several ages, countries, and educations, 6 II, XVII | minds the ideas of years, or ages, or any other assignable 7 II, XVII | as perhaps of millions of ages, or miles, which possibly 8 II, XVII | to be the same; or bring ages past and future together, 9 II, XXI | not in all countries and ages furnish examples enough 10 II, XXVII| those men, living in distant ages, and of different tempers, 11 II, XXVII| having continued so many ages in a state of silence, must 12 II, XXVII| extended—should it be to ages pastunites existences and 13 II, XXVII| have lived in different ages without the knowledge of 14 III, IX | who have lived in remote ages, and different countries, 15 III, IX | different countries and remote ages, wherein the speakers and 16 III, X | philosophers of these latter ages may be comprehended) have 17 III, X | prevailed mightily in these last ages, by the interest and artifice 18 III, XI | languages of remote countries or ages, and settle truer ideas 19 IV, V | truth? was an inquiry many ages since; and it being that 20 IV, VII | knowledge of, at different ages; and a great many of these 21 IV, VII | where it continued many ages, without teaching the world 22 IV, XII | among us, we should in a few ages be unavoidably reduced to 23 IV, XII | at that end has, for many ages together, advanced men’s 24 IV, XVI | consent of all men, in all ages, as far as it can be known, 25 IV, XVI | an account of men in all ages, and my own experience, 26 IV, XVI | be more valid in future ages by being often repeated. 27 IV, XVIII| if it were revealed some ages since, that the three angles 28 IV, XIX | Hence we see that, in all ages, men in whom melancholy 29 IV, XX | with the passport of former ages, and therefore I am secure


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