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Alphabetical    [«  »]
excavate 1
excavated 1
excavations 1
exceed 34
exceeded 16
exceeding 18
exceedingly 8
Frequency    [«  »]
34 dwelling
34 e
34 established
34 exceed
34 foot
34 generations
34 golden
Plato
Partial collection

IntraText - Concordances

exceed

Gorgias
   Part
1 Intro| fouler of two things must exceed either in pain or in hurt. 2 Intro| hurt. But the doing cannot exceed the suffering of evil in 3 Intro| pain, and therefore must exceed in hurt. Thus doing is proved 4 Text | be more painful and must exceed in pain or in evil or both: 5 Text | SOCRATES: Then they do not exceed in pain?~POLUS: No.~SOCRATES: 6 Text | SOCRATES: Then they can only exceed in the other?~POLUS: Yes.~ 7 Text | punished; —his share will exceed that of some, and be less Laws Book
8 5 | that in which the opposites exceed; nor, again, do we wish 9 5 | and feeble, and the pains exceed. And when, as I said before, 10 5 | preferred by us because they exceed in what we like, or are 11 5 | rejected by us because they exceed in what we dislike. All 12 5 | temperate life the pleasures exceed the pains, but in the intemperate 13 5 | intemperate life the pains exceed the pleasures in greatness 14 5 | that the painful should exceed, but the life in which pain 15 5 | courageous and wise and healthy exceed the cowardly and foolish 16 12 | highest class shall not exceed five minae; and for him Lysis Part
17 Text | their beloved. Nothing can exceed their love; and yet they Menexenus Part
18 Text | and all-absorbing aim, to exceed, if possible, not only us Parmenides Part
19 Intro| also the one can neither exceed nor be exceeded by the others, 20 Text | one, if it is great, must exceed; this, however, is impossible, 21 Text | others, it cannot either exceed or be exceeded by them?~ 22 Text | itself, it will neither exceed nor be exceeded by itself, Phaedo Part
23 Text | would say that two cubits exceed one cubit not by a half, 24 Text | Simmias does not really exceed Socrates, as the words may 25 Text | just as Simmias does not exceed Socrates because he is Simmias, 26 Text | greatness of the other to exceed his smallness. He added, Phaedrus Part
27 Text | wealthy, lest they should exceed him in wealth, or with men The Republic Book
28 1 | would desire or claim to exceed or go beyond a musician 29 1 | But he would claim to exceed the non-musician? ~Of course. ~ 30 2 | that their families do not exceed their means; having an eye 31 2 | if, like ourselves, they exceed the limit of necessity, The Sophist Part
32 Text | not see that nothing can exceed our ignorance, and yet we Timaeus Part
33 Intro| or Symposium. Nothing can exceed the beauty or art of the 34 Intro| Neo-Platonism. In length it does not exceed a fifth part of the Timaeus.


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