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Alphabetical    [«  »]
pitch 2
place 151
placed 82
places 66
placing 10
plain 3
plains 1
Frequency    [«  »]
67 against
67 others
66 always
66 places
66 space
65 among
65 go
Niccolò Machiavelli
On the Art of War

IntraText - Concordances

places

   Book
1 1| people who remain in the places mentioned by you will answer 2 1| permitted to draw men from those places that appear best to him: 3 1| cannot be made unless the places are subject to you; for 4 1| armies of Italy and other places are raised today with these 5 1| have to make the Deletto in places where the army was (already) 6 1| is made a leader in those places where he does not have any 7 2| length are useless in tight places; for if you have a staff 8 2| could more actively in tight places avail themselves of the 9 2| say thusly, that in many places in our histories you will 10 2| horses cannot go in all the places that the infantry do, because 11 2| makes him adept at occupying places before the enemy, to come 12 2| auxiliaries in their (proper) places.~¶ And as a Captain arranges 13 2| repulsed, who has to take their places, what signs, what (bugle) 14 2| Centurion, and occupies the places of three shield-bearers: 15 2| to pass through difficult places without disturbing the order; 16 2| quickly take their proper places, just as, if you were the 17 2| relocate to their proper places. Therefore, in wanting to 18 2| and all the men in their places, the Centurions quickly 19 2| has to pass by suspicious places by itself. None the less, 20 2| their ranks, know their places, return there quickly when 21 2| for when they are in their places, they are all of mind and 22 3| Centurions in their (proper) places: and, of the three Constables, 23 3| assaulting you in several places, as soon as you defeat one 24 3| Veliti come forth from their places together with the light 25 3| another, and how to take their places instantly: and therefore, 26 3| Army would be in its proper places. And this is the first exercise 27 4| you ought to seek wide places, especially if you have 28 4| because in rough and difficult places, you do not have the advantage 29 4| one, for you have to seek places where a small number can 30 4| you injury. Also, higher places ought to be sought so as 31 4| in wooded or mountainous places, and hence capable of ambush, 32 4| branches, but leaving several places (spaces) solid in order 33 4| by encamping in strong places, did not give Hannibal courage 34 4| the enemy, also in strong places, should come to meet you, 35 4| going to meet him in the places where he was encamped. But 36 5| members are in their proper places, the manner of accomplishing 37 5| or on the flanks. Whoever places them ahead in front of the 38 5| of two things: either he places them so far ahead, that 39 5| come forward and take those places and with those distances 40 5| hundred, enter into their places between the cavalry and 41 5| everyone has gone to their places, and the five companies 42 5| through solitary and difficult places without suffering hardship 43 5| be (the case) if an enemy places some booty before you, you 44 5| so that he will know the places, the numbers, the distances, 45 5| different people who know the places, and question them with 46 5| whether it checks with the places and with the information 47 5| elsewhere, for the river always places more material, and in a 48 5| scrawny horses, toward those places which were guarded by the 49 6| ever made an encampment in places where they should not have 50 6| But the Romans made the places strong with ditches, ramparts, 51 6| soldiers quick in knowing their places. And none of these is difficult, 52 6| their arms and take their places. If you want to imitate 53 6| embankments and all the places of the army, with double 54 6| therefore, they avoided marshy places, or exposure to noxious 55 6| the enemy from the strong places, sent one in the disguise 56 6| mountains and difficult places, and anything else which 57 7| entire fortress was full of places by both of them: For it 58 7| to retire into the other places; so that the forces of the 59 7| length thin (wide), the places for the cross-bowmen and 60 7| slender battlements; the (places for) bombardiers built that 61 7| large, and also to make the (places of the) bombardiers wide 62 7| gates, part in the principal places of the City, in order to 63 7| keep themselves in high places, and fight them from their 64 7| it, and turning to other places, caused her, in order to 65 7| they ought to guard those places better which they think 66 7| them in the most secret places of the body. Others have


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