Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] everlastingly 2 every 843 every-day 2 everybody 33 everyone 22 everything 132 everywhere 77 | Frequency [« »] 33 distributed 33 drawing 33 enable 33 everybody 33 fails 33 finally 33 fortunate | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances everybody |
Cratylus Part
1 Text | many names of each thing as everybody says that there are? and Euthydemus Part
2 Text | knowledge,—the inference is that everybody ought by all means to try 3 Text | the elder, spoke first. Everybody’s eyes were directed towards Euthyphro Part
4 Intro| who will be admitted by everybody, including the judges, to 5 Text | of pouring out myself to everybody, and would even pay for Gorgias Part
6 Text | competitive art, not against everybody,—the rhetorician ought not Laws Book
7 7 | if that were possible, everybody and everything in the house 8 10 | Cleinias. That again is what everybody will admit.~Athenian. But 9 12 | early in the morning, when everybody was most at leisure from Phaedrus Part
10 Text | guarded against everything and everybody, and has to hear misplaced Philebus Part
11 Text | many, which I may say that everybody has by this time agreed Protagoras Part
12 Text | an affair of state, then everybody is free to have a say—carpenter, 13 Text | each had the capacity, and everybody was freely teaching everybody 14 Text | everybody was freely teaching everybody the art, both in private The Republic Book
15 2 | with one another, and with everybody else? ~A difficulty by no 16 3 | those who hear them; for everybody will begin to excuse his 17 5 | it were self-evident to everybody, that in the matter of women 18 5 | admitted the principle that everybody was to do the one work suited 19 6 | hypotheses, which they and everybody are supposed to know, and 20 8 | paupers? ~Yes, he said; nearly everybody is a pauper who is not a 21 8 | their property, and against everybody else, and are eager for 22 8 | Yes; the saying is in everybody's mouth. ~I was going to 23 9 | miserable, and that he makes everybody else as miserable as himself. ~ 24 10 | and had been neglected by everybody else; and when he saw it, The Second Alcibiades Part
25 Text | person who is ignorant and everybody else?~ALCIBIADES: Yes.~SOCRATES: 26 Text | character, and it is by no means everybody who can interpret it. And The Sophist Part
27 Intro| in philosophy. Yet, as everybody knows, truth is not wholly The Statesman Part
28 Text | art, for it is evident to everybody.~YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.~ The Symposium Part
29 Text | raging against yourself and everybody but Socrates.~APOLLODORUS: 30 Text | superior not only to me but to everybody; there was no one to be 31 Text | is really tremendous, and everybody else either remained indoors, Theaetetus Part
32 Text | you could only persuade everybody, Socrates, as you do me, Timaeus Part
33 Intro| and children are known to everybody.~When all of them, both