Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
disgracefully 3
disgraces 1
disgracing 1
disguise 23
disguised 16
disguises 13
disgust 2
Frequency    [«  »]
23 dependent
23 descendants
23 directed
23 disguise
23 distribution
23 enjoyment
23 ethical
Plato
Partial collection

IntraText - Concordances

disguise

Cratylus
   Part
1 Intro| preserves his ‘know nothing’ disguise, and himself declares his 2 Intro| on this wild and fanciful disguise, in order that the truth 3 Intro| neoplatonist writers, now in the disguise of experience and common 4 Intro| same kind, which tends to disguise the fact that under cases 5 Text | heavens, and may be only a disguise of the air (aer), putting Crito Part
6 Text | a goatskin or some other disguise, and metamorphosed as the Gorgias Part
7 Intro| will be no more flattery or disguise, and no further use for 8 Intro| personal enmity under the disguise of moral or political principle: 9 Intro| him. His mission is not to disguise men from themselves, but 10 Text | them. Cookery simulates the disguise of medicine, and pretends Ion Part
11 Intro| about to run away in the disguise of a general. Would he rather 12 Text | slip away from me in the disguise of a general, in order that Phaedo Part
13 Intro| knowledge, but may perhaps disguise our ignorance. The truest Phaedrus Part
14 Intro| own wild humour, takes the disguise of Lysias, but he is also 15 Text | great and the great little, disguise the new in old fashions Philebus Part
16 Intro| though often used only as the disguise of self-interest has a great The Republic Book
17 2 | that ~"The gods, taking the disguise of strangers from other The Sophist Part
18 Intro| departing shadow in the disguise of a statesman. We are not 19 Intro| that he must be a god in disguise, who, as Homer would say, 20 Text | who comes to us in the disguise of a stranger? For Homer The Statesman Part
21 Intro| and monkeys. In this new disguise the Sophists make their 22 Intro| exhibited, first, in the disguise of an Eristic, secondly, Theaetetus Part
23 Intro| one to be veiled in the disguise of the other, lest through


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