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Alphabetical [« »] utter 65 utterance 11 utterances 4 uttered 41 uttering 17 utterly 89 uttermost 6 | Frequency [« »] 41 spurious 41 suggested 41 tried 41 uttered 41 vain 41 vulgar 41 weak | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances uttered |
The Apology Part
1 Intro| him having been actually uttered. They express the aspiration 2 Text | and yet they have hardly uttered a word of truth. But of Charmides Part
3 Text | Because, I said, he who uttered them seems to me to have Cratylus Part
4 Intro| can neither be spoken, nor uttered, nor addressed; a piece 5 Intro| trivial than a few words uttered by a child in any language. 6 Text | nor said.~SOCRATES: Nor uttered nor addressed? For example: 7 Text | words, whether spoken, said, uttered, or addressed, would have Euthydemus Part
8 Text | words which I have just uttered?~Why, I said, they are not Gorgias Part
9 Intro| philosophers, when they are first uttered, have found the world unprepared 10 Text | few words which Polus has uttered, that he has attended more 11 Text | sentence which you have just uttered, the word ‘thirsty’ implies 12 Text | I speak my words are not uttered with any view of gaining Laws Book
13 2 | that they may be safely uttered; I only know that no animal 14 4 | never to utter, or to have uttered, an unbecoming word to them; 15 4 | politics, no one has ever yet uttered any prelude, or composed 16 10 | intentionally did any unholy act, or uttered any unlawful word; but he 17 12 | whether written down or uttered in daily conversation, whether Lysis Part
18 Intro| counsel or sympathy has been uttered too obtrusively, at the Parmenides Part
19 Intro| not be conceived, defined, uttered, but could not be got rid 20 Intro| then, is neither named, nor uttered, nor known, nor perceived, Phaedo Part
21 Intro| to Socrates were actually uttered by him we forbear to ask; 22 Text | arms. When she saw us she uttered a cry and said, as women Phaedrus Part
23 Intro| more concentrated, and is uttered not to this or that person Philebus Part
24 Text | out of every word which is uttered, and that this union of 25 Text | exceedingly,’ which you have just uttered, and also the term ‘gently,’ Protagoras Part
26 Text | sentences, which they severally uttered. And they met together and The Republic Book
27 1 | now as at the time when he uttered them. For certainly old 28 2 | And now he himself who uttered the strain, he who was present 29 5 | which I would fain have uttered if it had not seemed too 30 5 | the word which you have uttered is one at which numerous The Seventh Letter Part
31 Text | word which we have just uttered. The second thing belonging The Sophist Part
32 Intro| subject. The Sophist first uttered the word ‘Man is the measure 33 Text | itself can neither be spoken, uttered, or thought, but that it 34 Text | argued, either conceived or uttered falsehood, inasmuch as not-being The Symposium Part
35 Intro| the time when they were uttered (compare Symp.)—which were 36 Text | oration which you have just uttered, I think that you were right, 37 Text | that the words which I had uttered like arrows had wounded Theaetetus Part
38 Intro| calls them up, and they are uttered by the lips. This is the Timaeus Part
39 Intro| spoken would not have been uttered. The sight of them and their 40 Text | universe would ever have been uttered. But now the sight of day 41 Text | and evil discourses are uttered in private as well as in