Book, Chapter
1 1, VIII | I myself repeated the sounds already stored in my memory
2 4, X | speech is accomplished by sounds which signify meanings,
3 8, X | ecstasy, we returned to the sounds of our own tongue, where
4 9, II | not do it with words and sounds of the flesh but with the
5 9, II | voice to something that sounds right to men, which thou
6 9, VIII | came in through the eyes; sounds of all kinds by the ears;
7 9, VIII | wish; and at the same time, sounds do not break in and disturb
8 9, VIII | considering, because the sounds which are also there are
9 9, X | retain the images of the sounds of which these words are
10 9, X | composed and I know that those sounds pass through the air with
11 9, X | were signified by those sounds I never could reach by any
12 9, XII | they are discussed: but the sounds are one thing, the things
13 9, XII | things another. For the sounds are one thing in Greek,
14 9, XIV | memories, not merely as the sounds of the names, as their images
15 9, XXXV | we also say, “See how it sounds, see how it smells, see
16 10, III | lend my bodily ears to the sounds that came forth out of his
17 10, III | the Hebrew language, the sounds would beat on my senses
18 10, XXVII| twice as long. But when one sounds after another, if the first
19 10, XXVII| begins to speak and his voice sounds until it reaches the predetermined
20 11, XXIX | not first utter formless sounds without singing and then
21 12, XXXIV| visible miracles and the sounds of words in harmony with
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