Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] punning 1 puns 1 puny 2 pupil 27 pupils 31 puppet 6 puppets 3 | Frequency [« »] 27 persians 27 pity 27 producing 27 pupil 27 pursued 27 rare 27 reflections | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances pupil |
Cratylus Part
1 Intro| ordinary reader or to a young pupil. Grammars and dictionaries Crito Part
2 Text | about another matter? Is the pupil who devotes himself to the Euthydemus Part
3 Text | to go to Euthydemus as a pupil, I reflected that I had The First Alcibiades Part
4 Text | and which is called the pupil, there is a sort of image Gorgias Part
5 Intro| had admitted that if his pupil did not know justice the 6 Text | might desire to become your pupil, and in fact I see some, 7 Text | else who knows? Or must the pupil know these things and come 8 Text | Socrates, I suppose that if the pupil does chance not to know Laches Part
9 Text | be a dull and uncongenial pupil: but that the teacher is Laws Book
10 7 | player who teaches and his pupil rendering note for note Lysis Part
11 Text | he is a terrible fellow—a pupil of Ctesippus. And there Menexenus Part
12 Text | finished speaker; even the pupil of very inferior masters, Meno Part
13 Intro| and Meno, who is their pupil, is ignorant of the very Phaedrus Part
14 Text | rhetorician, who teaches his pupil to speak scientifically, 15 Text | he will tell you why. The pupil must have a good theoretical Protagoras Part
16 Intro| before he becomes his pupil.~They go together to the 17 Text | will at all hazards be a pupil of Protagoras, and are prepared 18 Text | When a man has been my pupil, if he likes he pays my The Republic Book
19 3 | than for the patient or the pupil of a gymnasium not to speak 20 3 | deemed to have given his pupil good counsel when he told 21 3 | that he, the wise Cheiron's pupil, the son of a goddess and The Seventh Letter Part
22 Text | intimate relations with me as a pupil and listener to my discourses The Sophist Part
23 Intro| stranger, who is described as a pupil of Parmenides and Zeno, The Statesman Part
24 Intro| observation by the way. When a pupil at a school is asked the 25 Intro| weather, the patient or pupil seems to require a different The Symposium Part
26 Intro| have been composed by a pupil of Lysias or of Prodicus, Theaetetus Part
27 Intro| twice over, first, as a pupil of Socrates, and then of