Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
graduated 1
graecae 2
grain 4
grammar 40
grammar-master 3
grammarian 12
grammarians 5
Frequency    [«  »]
40 extraordinary
40 fairer
40 gets
40 grammar
40 granted
40 imitations
40 implied
Plato
Partial collection

IntraText - Concordances

grammar

Charmides
   Part
1 PreS | use of his Dictionary and Grammar; but is quite unworthy of Cratylus Part
2 Intro| of subject and predicate. Grammar and logic were moving about 3 Intro| a complete education in grammar and rhetoric; the double 4 Intro| stage by the influence of grammar and logic, and by the poetical 5 Intro| later period, logic and grammar, sister arts, preserve and 6 Intro| than any schoolboy of Greek grammar, and had no table of the 7 Intro| sentences are contained grammar and logic—the parts of speech, 8 Intro| supposing that the analysis of grammar and logic has always existed, 9 Intro| into an historical stage. Grammar is no longer confused with 10 Intro| grammarian in the paradigms of a grammar and learned out of a book, 11 Intro| rules and traditions of grammar, whether ancient grammar 12 Intro| grammar, whether ancient grammar or the corrections of it 13 Intro| philology has introduced. Grammar, like law, delights in definition: 14 Intro| of change or transition. Grammar gives an erroneous conception 15 Intro| lived in an age before grammar, when ‘Greece also was living 16 Intro| physiology of language, which grammar seeks to describe: into 17 Intro| enter. The ordinary Greek grammar gives a complete paradigm 18 Intro| associations and exceptions: grammar ties it up in fixed rules. 19 Intro| many varieties of usage: grammar tries to reduce them to 20 Intro| reduce them to a single one. Grammar divides verbs into regular 21 Intro| the sort of errors which grammar introduces into language. 22 Intro| study. Even to him the best grammar is the shortest and that 23 Intro| that the study of Greek grammar has received a new character 24 Intro| true that the traditional grammar has still a great hold on 25 Intro| troublesome than the figments of grammar, because they wear the appearance 26 Intro| false appearances in which grammar and philology, or the love 27 Intro| and sound, of logic and grammar, of differing analogies, 28 Intro| language demands regular grammar and correct spelling: these 29 Intro| language or the rules of grammar, or rather is to be regarded 30 Intro| taken out of the sphere of grammar and are exempt from the 31 Text | a complete education in grammar and language—these are his 32 Text | for when by the help of grammar we assign the letters alpha Euthydemus Part
33 Intro| there was no analysis of grammar, and mere puns or plays Phaedrus Part
34 Intro| any sound notion either of grammar or interpretation? Why did Philebus Part
35 Intro| assigned them to the art of grammar.~‘But whither, Socrates, 36 Text | one in music as well as in grammar?~PROTARCHUS: Certainly.~ 37 Text | this he called the art of grammar or letters.~PHILEBUS: The The Republic Book
38 1 | who errs in arithmetic or grammar is an arithmetician or grammarian The Sophist Part
39 Text | THEAETETUS: The art of grammar.~STRANGER: And is not this Timaeus Part
40 Intro| logic, of misunderstood grammar, and of the Orphic theology.~


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