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Alphabetical [« »] grandparents 1 grandson 4 grant 42 granted 40 granting 11 grants 2 grapes 5 | Frequency [« »] 40 fairer 40 gets 40 grammar 40 granted 40 imitations 40 implied 40 musical | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances granted |
Charmides Part
1 Text | is an excellent effect.~Granted.~And if you were to ask 2 Text | us than could be fairly granted; for we admitted that there Cratylus Part
3 Text | Socrates; and therefore I say, Granted.~SOCRATES: That is very Euthydemus Part
4 Text | about the thing at all?~He granted that proposition also.~But Gorgias Part
5 Intro| for their fellow-citizens. Granted; then there are two species 6 Intro| three weeks or months are granted to him in which he can provide 7 Text | have we not?~CALLICLES: Granted.~SOCRATES: And will not 8 Text | be refuted, or, if it is granted, what will be the consequences? 9 Text | against their will?~CALLICLES: Granted, Socrates, if you will only 10 Text | speak the truth.~CALLICLES: Granted then.~SOCRATES: And if they 11 Text | and inferior?~CALLICLES: Granted again.~SOCRATES: Then upon Laws Book
12 1 | proposition which has just been granted hold good: to wit, that 13 4 | conditions, and if these were granted by fortune, he would then 14 8 | practising the arts of war:—Granted; and now tell me, what is 15 10 | kinds of motion.~Cleinias. Granted.~Athenian. And we will assume Menexenus Part
16 Text | have mutually received and granted forgiveness of what we have Meno Part
17 Text | follows colour.~(SOCRATES: Granted.)~MENO: But if a person Phaedo Part
18 Intro| the existence of ideas is granted to him, Socrates is of opinion 19 Text | this desire of theirs is granted, how inconsistent would Phaedrus Part
20 Text | lessened by the favours granted; but the recollection of 21 Text | of the chiefest blessings granted to men. For prophecy is 22 Text | art of my own.~PHAEDRUS: Granted; if you will only please Philebus Part
23 Intro| continuous mental energy is not granted to men. The most sensual 24 Intro| such as would be freely granted to the ambiguous memory 25 Text | you. You, Socrates, have granted us this opportunity of conversing 26 Text | is pleasure?~PROTARCHUS: Granted; what you say has a general 27 Text | each of them.~PROTARCHUS: Granted.~SOCRATES: And the soul Protagoras Part
28 Text | counsel in doing injustice?~Granted.~If they succeed, I said, 29 Text | not possible, and is not granted to man; God only has this The Republic Book
30 1 | surely the gods are just? ~Granted that they are. But, if so, 31 5 | what they desire is already granted to them, they proceed with 32 10 | truly known to the gods. ~Granted. ~And if they are both known The Second Alcibiades Part
33 Text | ask, ‘Why the Gods always granted the victory to the Lacedaemonians?’ ‘ The Sophist Part
34 Text | learned imitation.~THEAETETUS: Granted.~STRANGER: The former is The Symposium Part
35 Text | noble action, they have granted the privilege of returning 36 Text | fools, would say of me if I granted it.’ To these words he replied Theaetetus Part
37 Text | is to know.~THEAETETUS: Granted.~SOCRATES: And further, Timaeus Part
38 Intro| opinion that such knowledge is granted to the gods only. To have 39 Text | the sense of hearing is granted to us for the sake of harmony; 40 Text | which the contemplation is granted to intelligence only. And