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Alphabetical    [«  »]
puns 1
puny 2
pupil 27
pupils 31
puppet 6
puppets 3
puppies 7
Frequency    [«  »]
31 profit
31 proportions
31 proposed
31 pupils
31 realities
31 referring
31 revealed
Plato
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pupils

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Charmides
   Part
1 Ded | TO MY FORMER PUPILS~in Balliol College and in 2 PreF | obligations to old friends and pupils. These are:—Mr. John Purves, Crito Part
3 Intro| Charmides, who had been his pupils, were still recent in the Euthydemus Part
4 Text | will want to have them as pupils, and for the sake of them 5 Text | Cleinias and me among your pupils.~Such was the discussion, The First Alcibiades Part
6 Pre | wholly the compositions of pupils; or they may have been the Gorgias Part
7 Intro| deemed unjust because his pupils are unjust and make a bad 8 Intro| can find fault with his pupils if they cheat him. And the 9 Text | leave the honorarium to his pupils, if he be really able to Laws Book
10 3 | physicians to treat or cure their pupils or patients in an agreeable 11 4 | scientifically to their pupils. You are aware that there 12 7 | this is possible; and the pupils shall be regarded as belonging 13 7 | the manner in which your pupils are to use those strains 14 7 | from the state, and their pupils should be the men and boys 15 7 | more intelligible to their pupils the arrangements and movements Menexenus Part
16 Pre | wholly the compositions of pupils; or they may have been the Meno Part
17 Intro| spirit of enquiry in their pupils, and not merely instruct Protagoras Part
18 Intro| mode of dealing with his pupils, as if in answer to the 19 Text | habit of insulting their pupils; who, when they have just 20 Text | and good; and I give my pupils their money’s-worth, and The Republic Book
21 7 | he replied. ~And will our pupils, when they hear this, refuse 22 7 | to reach, and which our pupils ought also to attain, and 23 7 | of the State; but, if our pupils are men of another stamp, The Sophist Part
24 Intro| to have said of his own pupils: ‘There is only one of you The Statesman Part
25 Intro| discipline to each of his pupils, or whether he has a general 26 Intro| directions for his patients or pupils, goes into a far country, 27 Text | which are enforced on their pupils by professional trainers 28 Text | them for the use of his pupils or patients.~YOUNG SOCRATES: The Symposium Part
29 Intro| rhetoricians, through their pupils, not forgetting by the way Theaetetus Part
30 Text | who is able to train his pupils in this spirit is a wise Timaeus Part
31 Intro| making it flow through the pupils. When the light of the eye


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