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Alphabetical [« »] wallace 5 wallow 2 wallowing 4 walls 31 wand-bearer 1 wand-bearers 1 wander 15 | Frequency [« »] 31 unjustly 31 vast 31 wall 31 walls 31 wind 31 wives 31 youths | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances walls |
Cratylus Part
1 Text | defended their city and long walls’?~This appears to be a good Critias Part
2 Intro| earth were surrounded by walls made of stone of divers 3 Intro| rock. The outermost of the walls was coated with brass, the 4 Text | all the other parts, the walls and pillars and floor, they The First Alcibiades Part
5 Text | to be happy, do not want walls, or triremes, or docks, Gorgias Part
6 Intro| assembly meets to advise about walls or docks or military expeditions, 7 Intro| to build their docks and walls, and of Pericles, whom Socrates 8 Text | skilled; and, again, when walls have to be built or harbours 9 Text | that the docks and the walls of the Athenians and the 10 Text | undertake buildings, such as walls, docks or temples of the 11 Text | clever at providing ships and walls and docks, and all that. 12 Text | of harbours and docks and walls and revenues and all that, Laws Book
13 3 | made enclosures of loose walls and works of defence, in 14 6 | also of the temples and walls. These, Cleinias, were matters 15 6 | fitly take place. As to the walls, Megillus, I agree with 16 6 | finely expressed, that “walls ought to be of steel and 17 6 | when they are protected by walls and gates, then they may 18 6 | trouble. But if men must have walls, the private houses ought 19 9 | writing their decrees on walls, go their ways; and whether, Lysis Part
20 Text | newly-erected Palaestra outside the walls of Athens.~I was going from Menexenus Part
21 Text | salvation, and dismantling our walls, which had preserved their 22 Text | into the war, and built walls and ships, and fought with 23 Text | the loss of our ships or walls or colonies; the enemy was Phaedrus Part
24 Intro| of remaining within the walls, his emphatic declaration 25 Text | ships, nor ever go to the walls of Troy;’~and when he had The Second Alcibiades Part
26 Text | peace, or the building of walls and the construction of The Seventh Letter Part
27 Text | charged straight for the walls, yelling out an unintelligible The Sophist Part
28 Intro| overhang in some ancient city’s walls. There are many such imperfect 29 Intro| thrown down many of the walls within which the human mind The Statesman Part
30 Intro| whether dresses, or arms, or walls, or (5) with the art of 31 Text | dress, most sorts of arms, walls and enclosures, whether