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Alphabetical    [«  »]
consecutively 1
consecutiveness 2
consensus 1
consent 38
consented 5
consenting 1
consents 1
Frequency    [«  »]
38 conduct
38 confess
38 conflict
38 consent
38 cronos
38 dangers
38 disciple
Plato
Partial collection

IntraText - Concordances

consent

The Apology
   Part
1 Text | that your silence gives consent. Now what are spirits or Charmides Part
2 Text | dictation, he said.~With my consent? I said, or without my consent?~ 3 Text | consent? I said, or without my consent?~With your consent, Socrates, 4 Text | without my consent?~With your consent, Socrates, he said, laughing.~ Cratylus Part
5 Text | that your silence gives consent), then custom and convention Crito Part
6 Intro| early in order to gain his consent to a plan of escape. This 7 Text | try and escape without the consent of the Athenians: and if Gorgias Part
8 Text | the just man will never consent to do injustice?~GORGIAS: Laws Book
9 5 | abroad, let him have the consent of the magistrates and go; 10 6 | husbandry without their consent; also if they receive anything 11 6 | hundred drachmae, or with the consent of the wardens of the city 12 6 | up to two minae with the consent of the wardens of the agora.~ 13 6 | prove to you, if you will consent to listen, that this institution 14 8 | of this sort, without the consent of the owner of the land, 15 10 | neighbour’s without the consent of the owner; for these 16 10 | to them, not having their consent; and the fifth kind is when 17 11 | belongs to me without my consent; and may I be of a sound 18 11 | ancestor of his, without the consent of the depositor, violating 19 11 | with him, unless he has the consent of the magistrates and of 20 11 | maiden may choose with the consent of her guardians any one 21 12 | another sort, if they have the consent of the guardians, being Philebus Part
22 Text | was saying, a universal consent that no refutation is needed; 23 Text | whether any one of us would consent to live, having wisdom and The Republic Book
24 3 | must first have the other's consent; and this rule is to limit 25 7 | them, if the Pythian oracle consent, as demigods, but if not, 26 10 | mankind, which by common consent have ever been deemed best, The Seventh Letter Part
27 Text | and desire as he had, I consent to aid your cause; but if 28 Text | reasonable, and I shall consent to it. But if not, none 29 Text | me to sail, will anyone consent to take me as a passenger, The Statesman Part
30 Text | men of property with their consent or against their consent, 31 Text | consent or against their consent, always in ordinary language The Symposium Part
32 Intro| invited to contradict gives consent to the narrator. We may 33 Text | and I must entreat you to consent to this, and not be jealous, Theaetetus Part
34 Intro| exceeding a single fall, I consent.’~Socrates now resumes the 35 Text | allow you to retract your consent on any such pretence as 36 Text | well as me.~THEODORUS: I consent; lead me whither you will, Timaeus Part
37 Text | necessity allowed or gave consent, has exactly perfected, 38 Text | to extinction when they consent to pass into the conquering


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