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Alphabetical [« »] ton 6 tone 18 tones 3 tongue 57 tongues 1 too 703 too-i 1 | Frequency [« »] 57 servants 57 smallness 57 test 57 tongue 57 writers 56 assembly 56 conditions | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances tongue |
The Apology Part
1 Intro| justice; he cannot have his tongue bound even ‘in the throat 2 Text | if he spoke in his native tongue, and after the fashion of 3 Text | but cannot you hold your tongue, and then you may go into 4 Text | therefore that I cannot hold my tongue, you will not believe that Cratylus Part
5 Intro| anything by imitation; and the tongue or mouth can imitate as 6 Intro| But this imitation of the tongue or voice is not yet a name, 7 Intro| names perceived that the tongue is most agitated in the 8 Intro| like. But when the slipping tongue is detained by the heavier 9 Intro| language is the gesture of the tongue; in the use of the letter 10 Intro| body to the movement of the tongue, Plato makes a great step 11 Intro| creation of the ear as of the tongue, and the expression of a 12 Intro| the instrument is not the tongue only, but more than half 13 Intro| of sounds. Every man has tongue, teeth, lips, palate, throat, 14 Intro| palate or the teeth with the tongue, by lengthening or shortening 15 Text | relation with the Hellenic tongue, and the Phrygians may be 16 Text | to us to be a barbarous tongue.~HERMOGENES: Very likely.~ 17 Text | that we had no voice or tongue, and wanted to communicate 18 Text | either with the voice, or tongue, or mouth, the expression 19 Text | he had observed that the tongue was most agitated and least 20 Text | closing and pressure of the tongue in the utterance of delta 21 Text | pronunciation of which the tongue slips, and in this he found 22 Text | gamma detained the slipping tongue, and the union of the two Laws Book
23 1 | like to hear the Athenian tongue spoken; the common saying 24 1 | at last the string of his tongue is loosened, and fancying 25 9 | doctors always have at their tongue’s end:—Foolish fellow, he Meno Part
26 Text | think. For my soul and my tongue are really torpid, and I Phaedrus Part
27 Intro| at the reins, covers his tongue and jaws with blood, and 28 Text | steed and covers his abusive tongue and jaws with blood, and The Republic Book
29 8 | disappear, and with unholy tongue and lips tasting the blood The Symposium Part
30 Text | said Socrates.~Hold your tongue, said Alcibiades, for by Theaetetus Part
31 Intro| And if you say “Yes,” the tongue will escape conviction but 32 Intro| of letters in a foreign tongue?’~‘We should say that the 33 Text | case for Euripides; for our tongue will be unconvinced, but 34 Text | from the patient makes the tongue percipient, and the quality 35 Text | appear sweet to the healthy tongue.~THEAETETUS: Certainly; 36 Text | sensation of bitterness in the tongue, and the motion and creation 37 Text | a mere noise, as of the tongue hissing; B, and most other Timaeus Part
38 Intro| parts. The affections of the tongue appear to be caused by contraction 39 Intro| into the small veins of the tongue which reach to the heart, 40 Intro| the narrow veins of the tongue, and meet there particles 41 Intro| particles is congenial to the tongue, and disposes the parts 42 Intro| flesh, as for example, the tongue. Had the combination of 43 Intro| mouth, having teeth and tongue and lips, with a view to 44 Intro| describes the works which no tongue can utter—his language, 45 Intro| affections peculiar to the tongue are of various kinds, and, 46 Intro| testing instruments of the tongue, and produce a more or less 47 Intro| particles congenial to the tongue soften and harmonize them. 48 Intro| of taste reach from the tongue to the heart. Plato has 49 Intro| On the other hand, the tongue is one of the most sensitive 50 Text | is called in the Egyptian tongue Neith, and is asserted by 51 Text | affections peculiar to the tongue. These too, like most of 52 Text | testing instruments of the tongue, reaching to the heart, 53 Text | the whole surface of the tongue, if they do it in excess, 54 Text | mouth, is congenial to the tongue, and smooths and oils over 55 Text | astringent bodies on the tongue, or of those heating bodies 56 Text | sensation,—as, for example, the tongue. But commonly this is not 57 Text | arranged, having teeth and tongue and lips, with a view to