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Alphabetical [« »] customary 20 customer 1 customers 2 customs 31 cut 65 cut-and-dried 1 cut-purses 2 | Frequency [« »] 31 bright 31 concrete 31 corrupt 31 customs 31 cycle 31 dances 31 dangerous | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances customs |
Cratylus Part
1 Intro| manners of men and gave them customs, whose voice and look and Gorgias Part
2 Intro| other. The conventions and customs which we observe in conversation, Laws Book
3 2 | great improvement, if the customs which prevail among them 4 2 | in some way or other, by customs and praises and words, that 5 3 | they lived by habit and the customs of their ancestors, as they 6 3 | another, would have peculiar customs in things divine and human, 7 3 | educated them; and these customs would incline them to order, 8 4 | would fain preserve the very customs which were their ruin, and 9 7 | general name of unwritten customs, and what are termed the 10 7 | they are just ancestral customs of great antiquity, which, 11 7 | many apparently trifling customs or usages come pouring in 12 7 | Let these, then, be the customs ordained by law about all 13 11 | the Gods, according to the customs and cautions of the wardens 14 11 | introduction:—There are ancient customs about the Gods which are 15 12 | of respect. These are the customs, according to which our The Republic Book
16 4 | penetrates into manners and customs; whence, issuing with greater The Seventh Letter Part
17 Text | affairs, the laws too and the customs, the more closely I examined 18 Text | Dorian life according to the customs of your forefathers, but The Statesman Part
19 Intro| written laws and national customs. When the rich preserve 20 Intro| the rich preserve their customs and maintain the law, this 21 Intro| he had. But he took the customs which he found already existing 22 Intro| grow, men make themselves customs which have the validity 23 Text | last will be traditional customs of the country.~YOUNG SOCRATES: 24 Text | unwritten to be national customs; and that in all future 25 Text | the law and the ancient customs of their ancestors; and 26 Text | written laws and the national customs. If such were the mode of 27 Text | written laws and national customs.~YOUNG SOCRATES: Very good.~ The Symposium Part
28 Intro| among us; and when these two customs—one the love of youth, the 29 Intro| against such practices or customs, because it is not always 30 Text | flattery. And these two customs, one the love of youth, Timaeus Part
31 Intro| the fixedness of Egyptian customs and the general observation