Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
bird 16
bird-catcher 2
bird-taker 2
birds 46
birth 137
birth-influence 1
birthday 3
Frequency    [«  »]
47 yesterday
46 allusion
46 application
46 birds
46 black
46 bringing
46 brothers
Plato
Partial collection

IntraText - Concordances

birds

Cratylus
   Part
1 Intro| animals, of the songs of birds (‘man, like the nightingale, 2 Intro| on the other hand, some birds which are comparatively 3 Intro| animals, of the song of birds, increase our insight into 4 Intro| irresistible kind in which birds, beasts and fishes devour Laws Book
5 3 | mother, whom, like a flock of birds, they followed, forming 6 7 | armpits, holding the smaller birds in their hands, the larger 7 7 | health, but the health of the birds; whereby they prove to any 8 7 | fight for their young, as birds will, against any creature 9 7 | insidious fancy of catching birds, which is hardly worthy 10 8 | fall below the nature of birds and beasts in general, who 11 12 | summer; this class are like birds of passage, taking wing 12 12 | most divine of gifts are birds and images, and they should Phaedo Part
13 Intro| subtler element. And if, like birds, we could fly to the surface Phaedrus Part
14 Intro| he could persuade the ‘birds’ to hear him, retiring a 15 Intro| becomes a tree, and ‘the birds of the air build their nests 16 Text | The old proverb says that ‘birds of a feather flock together’; 17 Text | whether made by the help of birds or of other signs—this, Philebus Part
18 Text | them, as diviners trust in birds, determine that pleasures The Republic Book
19 1 | age flock together; we are birds of a feather, as the old 20 5 | and of the nobler sort of birds not a few. Now, I beseech 21 5 | breeding, your dogs and birds would greatly deteriorate? ~ 22 10 | the life of a nightingale; birds, on the other hand, like The Sophist Part
23 Text | which the hunting of all birds is included.~THEAETETUS: The Statesman Part
24 Intro| dialectical method, which places birds in juxtaposition with men, 25 Intro| remaining species. Men and birds are both bipeds, and human 26 Text | that of bipeds into men and birds. Others however refer the The Symposium Part
27 Text | you not how all animals, birds, as well as beasts, in their Theaetetus Part
28 Intro| of wax, or to a decoy of birds, is found wanting.~But are 29 Intro| wear; or he may have wild birds in an aviary; these in one 30 Intro| empty; after a time the birds are put in; for under this 31 Intro| science. The possession of the birds is clearly not the same 32 Intro| may be flying about mock birds, or forms of ignorance, 33 Intro| This is implied in the birds, some in flocks, some solitary, 34 Text | man to have caught wild birdsdoves or any other birds— 35 Text | birds—doves or any other birds—and to be keeping them in 36 Text | an aviary of all sorts of birds—some flocking together apart 37 Text | We may suppose that the birds are kinds of knowledge, 38 Text | only forms of knowledge our birds: whereas there ought to 39 Text | distinguish the right and wrong birds, and which the owner keeps Timaeus Part
40 Intro| forms of men, animals, birds, fishes. And the attribution 41 Intro| one of gods, another of birds, a third of fishes, and 42 Intro| of the tree.~The race of birds was created out of innocent, 43 Intro| these were transformed into birds, and grew feathers instead 44 Text | gods; another, the race of birds whose way is in the air; 45 Text | general. But the race of birds was created out of innocent 46 Text | remodelled and transformed into birds, and they grew feathers


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