Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] administration 14 admirable 19 admirably 3 admiration 23 admire 17 admired 5 admirer 7 | Frequency [« »] 24 weaver 24 winter 24 youthful 23 admiration 23 affect 23 affinity 23 allows | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances admiration |
Cratylus Part
1 Intro| listens with a sort of half admiration, half belief, to the speculations Gorgias Part
2 Intro| brevity which excites the admiration of Socrates. The result 3 Intro| and looks with love and admiration on the soul of some just 4 Intro| they may win the esteem or admiration of others. A man of ability 5 Text | government, the envy and admiration both of citizens and strangers? 6 Text | good men, and worthy of all admiration they are, for where there 7 Text | Or, again, he looks with admiration on the soul of some just Laws Book
8 3 | I was thinking of my own admiration of the aforesaid Heracleid 9 3 | same way to express his admiration at the sight of great wealth 10 12 | Rhadamanthus is worthy of all admiration. He knew that the men of Menexenus Part
11 Text | corresponding feeling of admiration at me, and at the greatness Parmenides Part
12 Intro| smiled in seeming delight and admiration of Socrates. ‘Tell me,’ 13 Intro| Socrates with mixed feelings of admiration and displeasure. He was 14 Text | another, and smiled as if in admiration of him. When he had finished, Phaedrus Part
15 Intro| and hence he is full of admiration for the beauties of nature, The Republic Book
16 1 | a burden. ~I listened in admiration, and wanting to draw him The Second Alcibiades Part
17 Text | Lacedaemonians, too, whether from admiration of the poet or because they The Sophist Part
18 Intro| not undeserving of his admiration still. Perhaps if he were The Statesman Part
19 Text | calm! How temperate! in admiration of the slow and quiet working The Symposium Part
20 Text | the very few to whom, in admiration of her noble action, they Theaetetus Part
21 Intro| with a sort of ironical admiration, expresses his inability 22 Text | to Athens; he was full of admiration of his genius, and said 23 Text | you were lost in envy and admiration of his wisdom, he would