Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] peas 1 peasants 1 pebbly 1 peculiar 38 peculiarities 4 peculiarity 5 peculiarly 4 | Frequency [« »] 38 morality 38 outside 38 owing 38 peculiar 38 pious 38 presented 38 proverb | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances peculiar |
The Apology Part
1 Intro| That had arisen out of a peculiar mission which he had taken Cratylus Part
2 Intro| familiar phrase has also a peculiar power over us. But these 3 Intro| idiom’ is that which is peculiar, that which is familiar, Gorgias Part
4 Intro| art of novel writing, that peculiar creation of our own and 5 Text | as I may say in your own peculiar style; but if you have any 6 Text | every man’s feelings were peculiar to himself and were not Laws Book
7 2 | faint in discussing the peculiar difficulty of music. Music 8 2 | the voice, but gesture is peculiar to it, whereas song is simply 9 3 | one another, would have peculiar customs in things divine 10 3 | having already their own peculiar laws.~Cleinias. Certainly.~ 11 5 | present case, however, is peculiar. For there is no need to 12 7 | never heard of this very peculiar sort of gymnastic applied 13 8 | present discussion to have a peculiar dislike.~Athenian. That 14 8 | great help to those who make peculiar laws; but in the matter 15 11 | the idea that they were a peculiar–class, and we might distinguish 16 12 | taken not to destroy the peculiar qualities of the head and Lysis Part
17 Intro| whether there may not be some peculiar attraction, which draws 18 Text | the presence be after a peculiar sort?~The latter, he said.~ Meno Part
19 Intro| Good; and that they are not peculiar to himself (Phaedo; Republic; Phaedrus Part
20 Intro| has described as his own peculiar study.~Thus amid discord Philebus Part
21 Text | beautiful, and they have peculiar pleasures, quite unlike Protagoras Part
22 Text | corresponding thing having a peculiar function, no one of them The Republic Book
23 5 | him that there is nothing peculiar in the constitution of women 24 8 | will be for the most part peculiar. ~Yes. ~Yes, I said; and The Second Alcibiades Part
25 Pre | and which therefore have a peculiar interest for us. The Second The Sophist Part
26 Intro| attributes to them that peculiar Greek sympathy with youth, 27 Intro| unmeaning, but there is no peculiar sanctity or mystery in them. 28 Intro| these generally in a sense peculiar to himself. The first stage 29 Intro| his time, and there may be peculiar difficulties in his age 30 Text | reached his difference or peculiar. Then we may exhibit him The Statesman Part
31 Text | STRANGER: And a science of a peculiar kind, which was selected 32 Text | legislator,—showing his own peculiar virtue only in this, that The Symposium Part
33 Intro| suppose his feelings to be peculiar to himself: there are several Theaetetus Part
34 Intro| parents or other ancestors peculiar powers of sense or feeling, 35 Text | passes between them, and is peculiar to each percipient; are Timaeus Part
36 Intro| however, which has triangles peculiar to itself, is capable of 37 Intro| not smell.~The affections peculiar to the tongue are of various 38 Text | concerning the affections peculiar to the tongue. These too,