Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
twice 3
twisted 2
twisting 1
two 65
two-formed 1
type 2
udor 6
Frequency    [«  »]
66 now
66 out
65 had
65 two
63 great
56 am
55 being
Plato
Cratylus

IntraText - Concordances

two
   Dialogue
1 Craty| in the ear of posterity. Two causes may be assigned for 2 Craty| or his relation to the two other interlocutors in the 3 Craty| maintained by them.~The two subordinate persons of the 4 Craty| after him.~Between these two extremes, which have both 5 Craty| manner the union of the two. Language is conventional 6 Craty| meeting-point of the other two, just as conceptualism is 7 Craty| has probably arisen from two causes: first, the desire 8 Craty| say that Hector’s son had two names—~‘Hector called him 9 Craty| good warrior); but the two words present the same idea 10 Craty| slightly changed, offers two etymologies; either apo 11 Craty| sentence which is divided into two parts (Zeus, Dios). For 12 Craty| everything—o pan menuon. He has two forms, a true and a false; 13 Craty| en eauto etazon, cut into two parts, en eauto and etazon, 14 Craty| epenthesis of omicron in two places, may be identified 15 Craty| elevation I will examine the two words kakia and arete. The 16 Craty| eis agogen—(the binding of two together for the purpose 17 Craty| various combinations of two or more letters; just as 18 Craty| Suppose that there are two objectsCratylus and the 19 Craty| qualities: then there will be two Cratyluses, and not merely 20 Craty| You reply, because the two letters are sufficiently 21 Craty| Poetry and philosophy—these two, are the two great formative 22 Craty| philosophy—these two, are the two great formative principles 23 Craty| calculating. They are a drop or two of the great stream or ocean 24 Craty| is a combination of the two. Nor, again, are we sure 25 Craty| or d, t, or ch, k; or why two languages resemble one another 26 Craty| they are spoken. ‘Where two or three are gathered together,’ 27 Craty| vegetation are invariable, but no two plants, no two leaves of 28 Craty| invariable, but no two plants, no two leaves of the forest are 29 Craty| language are invariable, but no two languages are alike, no 30 Craty| languages are alike, no two words have exactly the same 31 Craty| exactly the same meaning. No two sounds are exactly of the 32 Craty| existence until one of the two is overpowered and retires 33 Craty| breath, in the case of one of two competing sounds; but these 34 Craty| sound, although a letter or two having this imitative power 35 Craty| inflexions, generally of two or three patterns, and with 36 Craty| loquendi.’~(8) There are two ways in which a language 37 Craty| either Latin or Greek. In the two latter, especially in Greek, 38 Craty| time the relation of the two was reversed: the poems 39 Craty| in the same sense even in two successive sentences. (2) 40 Craty| universally known. A word or two may be sufficient to give 41 Craty| subtraction of a letter or two, or indeed by the change 42 Craty| sentence, which is divided into two parts, for some call him 43 Craty| other half call him Dia; the two together signify the nature 44 Craty| Tethys is made up of these two words.~HERMOGENES: The idea 45 Craty| Then let us next take his two brothers, Poseidon and Pluto, 46 Craty| contrived’—out of these two words, eirein and mesasthai, 47 Craty| round and round, and has two forms, true and false?~HERMOGENES: 48 Craty| you say so?~SOCRATES: The two words selas (brightness) 49 Craty| orai (the seasons), and the two names of the year, eniautos 50 Craty| this is broken up into two words, eniautos from en 51 Craty| from within is one, but has two names, two words etos and 52 Craty| one, but has two names, two words etos and eniautos 53 Craty| away the tau and insert two omichrons, one between the 54 Craty| of greatness, and these two, mekos and anein, make up 55 Craty| consider the meaning of the two words arete (virtue) and 56 Craty| expresses the binding of two together (duein agoge) for 57 Craty| and the painter were the two names which you gave to 58 Craty| names which you gave to the two other imitators. What will 59 Craty| tongue, and the union of the two gave the notion of a glutinous 60 Craty| suppose the existence of two objects: one of them shall 61 Craty| Cratylus, or that there were two Cratyluses?~CRATYLUS: I 62 Craty| should say that there were two Cratyluses.~SOCRATES: Then 63 Craty| only agreed. Which of these two notions do you prefer?~CRATYLUS: 64 Craty| But I suppose one of the two not to be names at all.~ 65 Craty| make clear which of the two are right; and this must


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