Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] retailers 2 retailing 1 retails 4 retain 29 retained 19 retainer 1 retainers 3 | Frequency [« »] 29 pittacus 29 price 29 rejected 29 retain 29 rewards 29 rites 29 scarcely | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances retain |
Charmides Part
1 PreS | The translation should retain as far as possible the characteristic 2 Text | nature relative to self will retain also the nature of its object: Cratylus Part
3 Intro| noun or the sentence may retain a meaning. Better to admit 4 Intro| words from one another and retain their life comparatively 5 Intro| feet.’ When they cease to retain this living power of adaptation, Gorgias Part
6 Intro| death soul and body alike retain their characteristics; the 7 Intro| as souls only, yet they retain a sort of shadowy form when 8 Text | they are separated they retain their several natures, as Lysis Part
9 Intro| dissolved. It would be futile to retain the name when the reality Menexenus Part
10 Text | our fathers and mothers to retain these feelings throughout Parmenides Part
11 Intro| a positive one. Still we retain the word as a convenient Phaedo Part
12 Text | Which of them will you retain?~I think, he replied, that Phaedrus Part
13 Text | once they saw. Few only retain an adequate remembrance Philebus Part
14 Intro| shorn of their glory, they retain their place in the organism Protagoras Part
15 Text | climbed the height, Then, to retain virtue, however difficult The Sophist Part
16 Intro| the decline of the style, retain the impress of the great 17 Intro| essence, and no longer to retain any relation to other branches 18 Intro| should still allow us to retain the fundamental distinctions The Statesman Part
19 Intro| first, man and the world retain their divine instincts, Theaetetus Part
20 Intro| Republic, Timaeus, Critias, to retain the order in which Plato 21 Text | even in this discussion to retain the use of the term. But 22 Text | easily learn and easily retain, and are not liable to confusion, Timaeus Part
23 Intro| in this way:—Finer bodies retain coarser, but not the coarser 24 Intro| that the human mind should retain an enthusiasm for mere negations. 25 Intro| Even in Plato they still retain their contentious or controversial 26 Intro| like worn-out garments, and retain only a second-hand existence. 27 Text | sensations,’ which they still retain. And they did in fact at 28 Text | which have lesser parts retain the greater, but the greater 29 Text | but the greater cannot retain the lesser. Now of all natures