Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
siculus 1
sicyon 1
sicyonian 1
side 29
sides 9
sidicians 6
siege 23
Frequency    [«  »]
29 inhabitants
29 moved
29 particular
29 side
29 thought
29 whose
28 account
Niccolò Machiavelli
Discourses on the first Ten (Books) of Titus Livius

IntraText - Concordances

side

   Book,  Chapter
1 1, III | maltreated plebs might not side with them [the nobles] they 2 1, V | should be examined, the side of the Nobles would be preferred 3 1, VI | think of the more honorable side, and organize her in a way 4 1, VIII | sprung up hate on every side, whence it came to divisions, 5 1, XXIX | army in Illyria, took his side, and came into Italy against 6 1, XXX | take boldly the contrary side, and take all those means 7 1, XXXI | which Sergius was on the side whence the Tuscans could 8 1, XXXI | and Virginius on the other side. It happened that Sergius 9 1, XL | Appius had come to [the side of] the People and should 10 1, LIX | have followed the French side. And as for Republics, Saguntum 11 1, LIX | order to follow the Roman side, and with Florence in MDXII [ 12 1, LIX | order to follow the French side. And I believe, taking everything 13 2, I | powerful.~I will leave to one side how the Samnites remained 14 2, X | battle, will always take the side of fighting as being more 15 2, X | make a Captain choose the side of coming to battle against 16 2, XII | heard reasons cited on every side. And those who defend the 17 2, XII | in favor of every [both] side are: That he who assaults 18 2, XV | follow the Carthaginian side; but that it was right to 19 2, XVI | to put themselves on the side where the friendly cavalry, 20 2, XVII | is higher than the other side at the [time of] encounter, 21 2, XXXII | fight was lost on any one side, all the rest were lost. 22 3, VI | courage be wanting on any side, either by he who is arrested 23 3, XVIII | assaulting from another side the dominion of the Florentines, 24 3, XVIII | first gone to the other side, it would have had the same 25 3, XVII | parties in the City; for each side seeks to obtain aid, and 26 3, XXXIII| that the Gods were on their side. And if any Consul or other 27 3, XXXVII| so much advantage on his side that there is no danger 28 3, XLIII | who lived in Italy on this side of the Alps, to give them 29 3, XLVIII| Pisans, whom he left to one side when he talked with the


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