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Alphabetical    [«  »]
distinction 133
distinctions 55
distinctive 1
distinctly 26
distinctness 11
distinguish 120
distinguishable 9
Frequency    [«  »]
26 deliver
26 departed
26 direct
26 distinctly
26 diverse
26 echecrates
26 enmity
Plato
Partial collection

IntraText - Concordances

distinctly

Cratylus
   Part
1 Intro| but the victory was not distinctly attributed to any of them, 2 Intro| the distinction.~(4) Plato distinctly affirms that language is 3 Intro| habits of the animal is more distinctly perceived. The picture passes 4 Intro| paragraphs; these again are less distinctly marked in Greek and Latin Gorgias Part
5 Intro| Phaedo, pleasure and good are distinctly opposed.~This opposition 6 Text | treatment or accident are distinctly visible in it: for example, Laws Book
7 5 | opportunity, but on every occasion distinctly reminding themselves and 8 9 | his own hands and speak distinctly. But when a state has good 9 9 | which death is the penalty distinctly laid down in the law; or 10 10 | there is no difficulty in distinctly stating, that since soul 11 12 | and you, Cleinias, say distinctly what is the aim of mind Meno Part
12 Intro| nature of knowledge is more distinctly explained. There is a progression Phaedo Part
13 Intro| the unity of God was more distinctly acknowledged, the conception Philebus Part
14 Intro| found they cannot always distinctly tell;—deduced from the laws Protagoras Part
15 Intro| the chief or only good, is distinctly renounced.~Thus after many 16 Text | but Protagoras would not distinctly say which he would do. Thereupon 17 Text | proceed with the argument, or distinctly refuse to proceed, that The Sophist Part
18 Intro| the first philosopher who distinctly enunciated this principle; 19 Text | them.~THEAETETUS: Say more distinctly what you mean.~STRANGER: 20 Text | ascertain from them more distinctly, whether they further admit 21 Text | one appears more or less distinctly, the other will equally The Statesman Part
22 Intro| Nicomachean Ethics, is also first distinctly asserted in the Statesman Theaetetus Part
23 Text | possibility of error will be more distinctly recognised, if we put the 24 Text | knowledge has now been most distinctly proved to be different from Timaeus Part
25 Intro| difficult, because we more distinctly see the consequences which 26 Intro| remember that they were not distinctly defined to his, as they


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