| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] intelligences 2 intelligent 31 intelligi 1 intelligible 25 intelligibleness 1 intelligibly 9 intelligo 1 | Frequency [« »] 25 father 25 framed 25 goodness 25 intelligible 25 malleableness 25 mathematics 25 mode | John Locke An essay concerning human understanding IntraText - Concordances intelligible |
Book, Chapter
1 Read | has made very clear and intelligible; though afterwards the mind 2 Read | have to say as easy and intelligible to all sorts of readers 3 I, I | perceiving it, seems to me hardly intelligible. If therefore children and 4 I, III | himself, and make what he says intelligible.~22. Principles not innate, 5 II, I | For it is altogether as intelligible to say that a body is extended 6 II, XIV | period, it is altogether as intelligible as reckoning from the beginning 7 II, XXI | altogether as proper and intelligible to say that the power of 8 II, XXI | speaking, when put into more intelligible words, will, I think, amount 9 II, XXI | other way, be easily made intelligible.~36. Because the removal 10 II, XXIII| desire him to put it into intelligible English; and then from thence 11 II, XXIII| great soever, can be no intelligible cause of the cohesion of 12 II, XXIII| cohesion of its solid parts) intelligible, till he could show wherein 13 II, XXIII| ever the nearer making it intelligible, by resolving it into a 14 III, III | could not be significant or intelligible to another, who was not 15 III, III | essence of a mermaid is as intelligible as that of a man; and the 16 III, VI | another, is all one, and as intelligible, as to say, body moves or 17 III, VI | every man’s words, being intelligible only to himself, would no 18 III, IX | exchange thoughts, and hold intelligible discourse with others, in 19 III, IX | of several words that are intelligible. Those which are not intelligible 20 III, IX | intelligible. Those which are not intelligible at all, such as names standing 21 III, IX | Religion are plain, and very intelligible to all mankind, and seldom 22 III, X | would be as proper, and as intelligible to say, “the body of an 23 IV, II | glad any one would make intelligible that he did), conceive how 24 IV, III | thought to go furthest in an intelligible explication of those qualities 25 IV, X | explain this and make it intelligible, and then the next step