Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
combining 13
combs 1
come 573
comedy 30
comedy-did 1
comeliness 1
comely 3
Frequency    [«  »]
30 b
30 begun
30 bone
30 comedy
30 community
30 concerns
30 constructed
Plato
Partial collection

IntraText - Concordances

comedy

The Apology
   Part
1 Text | have yourselves seen in the comedy of Aristophanes (Aristoph., Cratylus Part
2 Intro| amusing his fancy by writing a comedy in the form of a prose dialogue? Laws Book
3 2 | a tragedy, and another a comedy. Nor would there be anything 4 2 | children will be advocates of comedy; educated women, and young 5 7 | intended to produce laughter in comedy, and have a comic character 6 7 | which are generally called comedy. And, if any of the serious 7 8 | and everywhere, whether in comedy or in the graver language Philebus Part
8 Intro| spectator of tragedy? and of comedy also? ‘I do not understand 9 Intro| rationale of tragedy and comedy, and equally the rationale 10 Intro| difficulty in seeing that in comedy, as in tragedy, the spectator 11 Intro| feeling of the spectator in comedy sufficiently by a theory 12 Intro| theory which only applies to comedy in so far as in comedy we 13 Intro| to comedy in so far as in comedy we laugh at the conceit 14 Text | you aware that even at a comedy the soul experiences a mixed 15 Text | mixture of feelings at a comedy.~PROTARCHUS: There is, I 16 Text | lamentations, and in tragedy and comedy, not only on the stage, 17 Text | admixture which takes place in comedy? Why but to convince you The Republic Book
18 3 | supplied by tragedy and comedy; there is likewise the opposite 19 3 | ask whether tragedy and comedy shall be admitted into our The Sophist Part
20 Intro| Greece. For the purposes of comedy, Socrates may have been The Symposium Part
21 Intro| tragedy is the same as that of comedy, and that the writer of 22 Intro| ought to be a writer of comedy also. And first Aristophanes 23 Intro| the very genius of the old comedy, its coarse and forcible 24 Intro| ludicrous in the old Greek Comedy, as it has been in other 25 Intro| Comic poets; and in the New Comedy the allusions to such topics 26 Intro| representations either of Comedy or Satire; and still less 27 Text | acknowledge that the genius of comedy was the same with that of 28 Text | tragedy was an artist in comedy also. To this they were Theaetetus Part
29 Intro| Epicharmus, the king of Comedy, and Homer, the king of 30 Text | Epicharmus, the prince of Comedy, and Homer of Tragedy; when


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