Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] allowances 1 allowed 188 allowing 24 allows 23 alloy 2 alloyed 3 allude 3 | Frequency [« »] 23 admiration 23 affect 23 affinity 23 allows 23 apollodorus 23 armed 23 asserted | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances allows |
Cratylus Part
1 Intro| in a robe of fancy, and allows his principles to drop out 2 Text | swiftest thing in existence, allows of no stay in things and Euthydemus Part
3 Intro| uncertainty of language, which allows the same words to be used Laws Book
4 3 | far as the nature of man allows, must and ought to distribute 5 4 | mind; like a fountain, he allows to flow out freely whatever 6 7 | learning music than the law allows. And let him who disobeys 7 8 | and never for a moment allows them to think of anything 8 11 | restitutions which the law allows. And let legal restitution Phaedrus Part
9 Intro| allegory, and an allegory which allows the meaning to come through. 10 Text | as far as their nature allows them to be subjected to The Republic Book
11 3 | Very true. ~And, when a man allows music to play upon him and 12 5 | should say. ~And he who allows himself to be taken prisoner 13 6 | far as the nature of man allows; but like everyone else, 14 10 | trained by reason or habit, allows the sympathetic element The Seventh Letter Part
15 Text | do not think that piety allows one to offer compulsion, The Statesman Part
16 Intro| criticism nor experience allows us to suppose that there 17 Text | see if the supreme power allows of any further division.~ The Symposium Part
18 Text | love the custom of mankind allows him to do many strange things, 19 Text | attachment which custom allows in the beloved, and this Theaetetus Part
20 Intro| and then, if my familiar allows me, which is not always 21 Text | and then, if my familiar allows, which is not always the Timaeus Part
22 Intro| flowed in upon it. He hardly allows to the notions of the ancients 23 Text | as far as their nature allows, irrefutable and immovable—