Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
thoroughly 1
those 732
though 45
thought 29
thoughtlessness 2
thoughts 9
thousand 67
Frequency    [«  »]
29 moved
29 particular
29 side
29 thought
29 whose
28 account
28 act
Niccolò Machiavelli
Discourses on the first Ten (Books) of Titus Livius

IntraText - Concordances

thought

   Book,  Chapter
1 1, I | replied that he had not thought of it: at which he laughed, 2 1, VII | regular way or repressing him, thought of extraordinary ways, so 3 1, XXI | Virgil could not express this thought better, and with other words 4 1, XXXIII| neighbors which at first had not thought how much harm that new Republic 5 1, XXXVII| the powerful men, and who thought that by going against it 6 1, XXXIX | wanted to oppress them, they thought it had arisen form the ambition 7 1, XXXIX | And because of this, they thought that it was necessary either 8 1, XLVII | The Senate yielded to this thought, and he called the people 9 1, XLIX | long time and without any thought to [freeing] itself: afterward 10 2, II | Tyrannicides was quelled, and they thought of how a free government 11 2, VIII | be able to resist them, thought it better to save themselves 12 2, X | treasure: and asking what he thought his power to be, Solon answered 13 2, XV | the Latins held when they thought of alienating themselves 14 2, XVII | at diverse times, I have thought upon the general opinions 15 2, XVIII | of fortune, whose main thought was how they should be able 16 2, XXIV | like them, they would have thought to build them: but as they 17 2, XXIV | to both, not having given thought because of it to more honest 18 2, XXV | medium of such disunion) thought they could extinguish the 19 2, XXVI | become haughty from [the thought] of victory, did not omit 20 2, XXIX | that the Senate with no thought of defending Rome (any more 21 2, XXXII | and because of this they thought that it would be better 22 3, III | allowed him to do it. For he thought, in addition to his belief 23 3, XII | they saw the way open, they thought more of flight than of fighting. 24 3, XVI | that it be done, as they thought more of honor and little 25 3, XVI | had sprung up, which being thought perilous, [the command of 26 3, XVIII | won on his wing, Cassius thought it had lost, and that the 27 3, XXV | the public; for if they thought of enriching themselves 28 3, XXX | Tribune with consular power, thought he would be able to do without 29 3, XXXI | these abject thoughts, they thought always of [continuing] the


Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (V89) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2007. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License