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Alphabetical [« »] rung 2 runner 5 runners 6 running 53 runs 25 rupture 1 rush 13 | Frequency [« »] 53 party 53 provided 53 remarkable 53 running 53 servant 53 telling 53 unequal | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances running |
Charmides Part
1 Text | Certainly.~And in leaping and running and in bodily exercises Cratylus Part
2 Intro| vessel,’ or ‘a man who has a running at the nose’; he attributes 3 Intro| by letting them drop. The running of any animal would be described 4 Intro| world is a man who has a running at the nose. This doctrine 5 Intro| which war and conquest were running riot over whole continents, 6 Text | they were always moving and running, from their running nature 7 Text | and running, from their running nature they were called 8 Text | because this element is always running in a flux about the air ( 9 Text | is a compound of thein (running), and allesthai (leaping). 10 Text | if we were describing the running of a horse, or any other 11 Text | world is a man who has a running at the nose. This may be Crito Part
12 Text | miserable slave would do, running away and turning your back Euthydemus Part
13 Text | allow me to learn.~You are running away, Socrates, said Dionysodorus, The First Alcibiades Part
14 Text | or horses have powers of running, would the many still be Gorgias Part
15 Intro| of them. When a theory is running away with us, criticism 16 Intro| orator has a settled design, running through his life, to which 17 Text | such as sitting, walking, running, sailing; or, again, wood, 18 Text | that he had fallen in while running after a goose, and had been 19 Text | declaimer, and seem to be running riot in the argument. And Laches Part
20 Text | quickness, and which is found in running, in playing the lyre, in 21 Text | a little time—whether in running, speaking, or in any other Laws Book
22 1 | carry a heavy weight when running, and bows and arrows are 23 1 | including swiftness in running and bodily agility generally, 24 4 | shore, and again to come running back to their ships; or 25 7 | similar notion about horses running at Olympia, or about men 26 7 | victory over the animals by running them down and striking them 27 8 | and first, let us speak of running and swiftness.~Cleinias. 28 8 | regulations about contests in running both for men and women.~ 29 8 | a victory in wrestling, running, and the like; and shall 30 9 | Athenian. Excellent. I was running on too fast, Cleinias, and Meno Part
31 Intro| calls his master, are still running in the mind of Socrates. Phaedo Part
32 Text | to run when he is already running. But I was not certain of 33 Text | would be no sense in his running away. The wise man will 34 Text | instead of playing truant and running away, of enduring any punishment Phaedrus Part
35 Intro| may be seen of the lover running away from the beloved, who Philebus Part
36 Intro| goods, is already out of the running.~VI. We may now endeavour Protagoras Part
37 Text | away, and to be caught in running away, is the very height The Republic Book
38 6 | showy titles-like prisoners running out of prison into a sanctuary, 39 8 | stealing their pleasures and running away like children from 40 9 | saying this I have been running into a digression; but the The Second Alcibiades Part
41 Text | that will be safer than running such a tremendous risk.~ The Statesman Part
42 Intro| bipeds, and human beings are running a race with the airiest 43 Intro| when he thinks of the king running after his subjects, like 44 Text | creation, and have been running a race with them.~YOUNG 45 Text | that the king is found running about with the herd and 46 Text | at which men compete in running, wrestling, and the like?~ 47 Text | rest together from their running, wrestling, or whatever The Symposium Part
48 Intro| represented in the Symposium as running through all nature and all 49 Text | There was a time when I was running about the world, fancying 50 Text | only are pursued who are running away headlong. I particularly Theaetetus Part
51 Text | one were to praise you for running, and to say that he never 52 Text | think, Socrates, that we are running my old friend too hard.~ Timaeus Part
53 Text | might be watered as from a running stream. In the first place,