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| Alphabetical [« »] logic 1 logical 1 logicians 1 long 31 longer 6 longest 1 look 3 | Frequency [« »] 31 appearance 31 former 31 founded 31 long 31 powers 31 seem 31 subject | David Hume An Enquiry concerning Human Understanding IntraText - Concordances long |
Sect., Part, Paragraph
1 I, 0, 8 | objects are too fine to remain long in the same aspect or situation; 2 I, 0, 9 | operations? Astronomers had long contented themselves with 3 II, 0, 17 | that jargon, which has so long taken possession of metaphysical 4 IV, II, 31 | instance, as after ever so long a course of experience. 5 IV, II, 31 | them. It is only after a long course of uniform experiments 6 IV, II, 33 | perfectly familiar to me long before I was out of my cradle.~ ~ 7 V, I, 34 | preserve its influence as long as human nature remains 8 V, I, 35 | experience, and has lived so long in the world as to have 9 V, II, 43 | of a friend, who had been long dead or absent, were presented 10 VII, I, 52 | Till at last, through a long succession, the desired 11 VII, I, 54 | operation. They acquire, by long habit, such a turn of mind, 12 VII, I, 57 | are got into fairy land, long ere we have reached the 13 II, 0, 61 | do at present, after so long a course of uniform experience. 14 VIII, I, 62| that a controversy has been long kept on foot, and remains 15 VIII, I, 62| terms, that they could so long form different opinions 16 VIII, I, 62| region of spirits, they may long beat the air in their fruitless 17 VIII, I, 62| preserve the dispute so long undecided but some ambiguous 18 VIII, I, 63| has been the case in the long disputed question concerning 19 VIII, I, 65| experience, acquired by long life and a variety of business 20 VIII, I, 72| thenceforth merely verbal. But as long as we will rashly suppose, 21 VIII, II, 75| of human actions: But as long as the meaning is understood, 22 VIII, II, 78| the train he employed be long or short; so wherever a 23 IX, 0, 83 | old, who have learned, by long observation, to avoid what 24 IX, 0, 88 | 4. Few men can think long without running into a confusion 25 X, I, 95 | consequently, will be useful as long as the world endures. For 26 X, I, 95 | the world endures. For so long, I presume, will the accounts 27 X, II, 105| He had been seen, for so long a time, wanting a leg; but 28 X, II, 105| sanctity the people were so long deluded. The curing of the 29 X, II, 109| and in all probability long after the facts which it 30 XI, 0, 122| infer another, and draw a long chain of conclusions concerning 31 XII, III, 139| go beyond common life, so long as they consider the imperfection