Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
contended 3
contending 13
contends 5
content 30
contented 12
contented-will 1
contention 14
Frequency    [«  »]
30 concerns
30 constructed
30 containing
30 content
30 contradict
30 corruption
30 departure
Plato
Partial collection

IntraText - Concordances

content

Charmides
   Part
1 PreS | interstices, and they are content to place sentences side 2 PreS | the sciences, he is now content to pass through the sciences Gorgias Part
3 Text | with equality they must be content, and that the equal is the Laws Book
4 4 | so good. Still we may be content. The sea is pleasant enough Phaedo Part
5 Intro| frames. Most people have been content to rest their belief in Phaedrus Part
6 Intro| abstract, devoid of any real content. At length it ceased to 7 Text | still, we ought not to be content with the name of Hippocrates, Philebus Part
8 Intro| uncertain in meaning, so void of content, so at variance with common 9 Intro| any consideration of its content: it may be for great good Protagoras Part
10 Text | ever so little, we must be content with the result. A teacher The Republic Book
11 3 | keeping to the same track, is content to practise the simple gymnastics, 12 4 | circumstances, I am quite content. I, too, I replied, shall 13 5 | be a guardian, and is not content with this safe and harmonious 14 6 | full of wickedness, he is content, if only he can live his 15 9 | they are pleased and well content to be at rest. ~Again, when The Seventh Letter Part
16 Text | with readiness, and do not content myself with giving him a The Sophist Part
17 Intro| Still less could they be content with the description which 18 Text | not-being. But let us be content to leave them, and proceed The Statesman Part
19 Intro| Sophist. At present I am content with the indirect proof 20 Intro| falls, like Icarus, and is content to walk instead of flying; The Symposium Part
21 Text | little comeliness, he will be content to love and tend him, and 22 Text | and many a one would be content to live seeing them only Theaetetus Part
23 Intro| to be invented before the content can be filled up. We cannot 24 Intro| until science obtained a content. The ancient philosophers 25 Intro| sense, but gives them a new content by comparing and combining 26 Text | value of the superficial content of their squares; and the 27 Text | is a waggon, we should be content to answer, that a waggon Timaeus Part
28 Intro| of the world we must be content to take probability for 29 Intro| not understand that the content of notions is in inverse 30 Intro| them they become devoid of content and therefore indistinguishable;


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