| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] 20 23 21 18 22 18 23 18 235421 1 24 16 248106 1 | Frequency [« »] 19 wax 18 21 18 22 18 23 18 acquaintance 18 apparent 18 axioms | John Locke An essay concerning human understanding IntraText - Concordances 23 |
Book, Chapter
1 I, I | engraven upon their minds.~23. The argument of assenting 2 I, II | self-evident, and innate truths.~23. Principles supposed innate 3 I, III | to speak more hereafter.~23. Difference of men’s discoveries 4 II, I | to speak more hereafter.~23. A man begins to have ideas 5 II, VIII | we denominate from them.~23. Three sorts of qualities 6 II, XIII | annihilate any particle of it.~23. Motion proves a vacuum. 7 II, XIV | motion of a comet does.~23. Minutes, hours, days, and 8 II, XIV | time of Alexander counted 23,000 years from the reign 9 II, XXI | And as to that I imagine.~23. How a man cannot be free 10 II, XXIII| comprehend an extended thing.~23. Cohesion of solid parts 11 II, XXVII| accusing or excusing him.~23. Consciousness alone unites 12 II, XXXII| and fixedness of gold.~23. When judged adequate, without 13 III, VI | constitutions of things.~23. Species in animals not 14 III, IX | the greatest difficulty.~23. Especially of the Old and 15 III, X | would have be different.~23. The ends of language: First, 16 III, XI | ascertained as that of triangle.~23. A reflection on the knowledge 17 IV, III | and examining our ideas.~23. One cause of our ignorance 18 IV, XVII | shamefacedness, ignorance, or error.~23. Above, contrary, and according