Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] soever 1 sofas 2 sofist 1 soft 36 soften 1 softened 7 softening 1 | Frequency [« »] 36 series 36 shadow 36 shadows 36 soft 36 temper 36 trace 36 transition | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances soft |
Laws Book
1 1 | of iron, but this one is soft because golden; and there 2 10 | of dry with moist, or of soft with hard, and according 3 10 | to that which is hard and soft and heavy and light; and Lysis Part
4 Text | says. Beauty is certainly a soft, smooth, slippery thing, Phaedrus Part
5 Text | toil, accustomed only to a soft and luxurious diet, instead Protagoras Part
6 Text | black, and hard is like soft, and the most extreme opposites The Republic Book
7 3 | unbecoming. ~And which are the soft or drinking harmonies? ~ 8 3 | his ears those sweet and soft and melancholy airs of which 9 7 | felt to be both hard and soft? ~You are quite right, he 10 7 | of a hard which is also soft? What, again, is the meaning The Statesman Part
11 Text | had no beds, but lay on soft couches of grass, which 12 Text | figure as spun thick and soft, after the manner of the The Symposium Part
13 Intro| love is young and dwells in soft places,—not like Ate in 14 Intro| hearts and souls, which are soft enough. He is all flexibility 15 Text | upon the hard but upon the soft. Let us adduce a similar 16 Text | men, which are not so very soft, but in the hearts and souls 17 Text | of ways in the softest of soft places, how can he be other Theaetetus Part
18 Intro| know a thing to be hard or soft by the touch, of which the 19 Text | white, or hard from being soft, or undergoes any other 20 Text | softness of that which is soft equally by the touch?~THEAETETUS: 21 Text | and of impure wax, or very soft, or very hard, then there 22 Text | corresponding defect in the mind—the soft are good at learning, but 23 Text | no depth in them; and the soft too are indistinct, for Timaeus Part
24 Intro| scents, or the smooth and soft materials on which figures 25 Intro| rolls upon the earth, and soft because its bases give way. 26 Intro| which the flesh yields, and soft which yields to the flesh, 27 Intro| implanted in the body the soft and bloodless substance 28 Intro| yet the entire frame is soft and delicate, being newly 29 Text | wish to impress figures on soft substances do not allow 30 Text | rolls along the ground), and soft, because its bases give 31 Text | which our flesh yields, and soft which yields to our flesh; 32 Text | are also termed hard and soft relatively to one another. 33 Text | was, in the first place, soft and bloodless, and also 34 Text | lung about the heart as a soft spring, that, when passion 35 Text | it with them and formed soft and succulent flesh. As 36 Text | and yet the whole mass is soft and delicate, being freshly