Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] homeliness 1 homer 216 homer-these 1 homeric 20 homeridae 1 homerids 1 homes 6 | Frequency [« »] 20 grave 20 happiest 20 hermes 20 homeric 20 homicide 20 ignoble 20 implements | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances homeric |
Cratylus Part
1 Intro| to the authority of the Homeric poems, Socrates shows that 2 Intro| genneteira (compare the Homeric form gegaasi); ora (with 3 Intro| increase: this word, which is Homeric, is of foreign origin. Blaberon 4 Intro| changed;’ ‘there is an old Homeric word emesato, meaning “he 5 Intro| romances into which the Homeric Poems were converted, for 6 Text | there is an often-recurring Homeric word emesato, which means ‘ 7 Text | this latter is a common Homeric word, and has a foreign Gorgias Part
8 Intro| is a rhetorician, and in Homeric language, ‘boasts himself 9 Text | would call me that which, in Homeric language, ‘I boast myself Ion Part
10 Text | may escape exhibiting your Homeric lore. And if you have art, Parmenides Part
11 Intro| who appeared to him, in Homeric language, to be ‘venerable Phaedo Part
12 Intro| popular belief. The old Homeric notion of a gibbering ghost 13 Text | above, while I draw near in Homeric fashion, and try the mettle Philebus Part
14 Intro| they shall mingle in an Homeric ‘meeting of the waters.’ The Republic Book
15 10 | handed down to posterity a Homeric way of life, such as was The Second Alcibiades Part
16 Text | to be a wild thing (The Homeric word margos is said to be The Symposium Part
17 Text | together,’~he replied, in Homeric fashion, one or other of Theaetetus Part
18 Intro| ideas, has a history. The Homeric poems contain no word for 19 Intro| realized gradually: in the Homeric poems, or even in the Hesiodic 20 Text | venerable and awful, as in Homeric language he may be called;—