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Alphabetical [« »] lateral 2 latest 11 lathe 8 latin 18 latitude 1 latter 196 latter-i 1 | Frequency [« »] 18 infancy 18 irregular 18 kingly 18 latin 18 lessons 18 luxury 18 maintains | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances latin |
Charmides Part
1 PreS | required in Greek as in Latin or English, nor in earlier 2 PreS | which Cicero avoided in Latin (de Amicit), the frequent Cratylus Part
3 Intro| languages like Greek and Latin, which have retained their 4 Intro| or German. Even a little Latin will enable us to appreciate 5 Intro| certainly in Sanskrit, Greek, Latin, we are not at the beginning 6 Intro| that the accusative of a Latin noun in ‘us’ should end 7 Intro| self-improvement as the Latin, if not as the Greek. Nor 8 Intro| Modern Greek or of Mediaeval Latin. The wide diffusion of great 9 Intro| greatly from that of either Latin or Greek. In the two latter, 10 Intro| distinctly marked in Greek and Latin than in English. Generally 11 Intro| than in either Greek or Latin. On the other hand, the Meno Part
12 Intro| latent in the semi-barbarous Latin, and putting a new meaning Parmenides Part
13 Intro| Platonic Ideas into a crude Latin phraseology, the spirit Phaedrus Part
14 Intro| and literature, unlike the Latin, which has come to life The Sophist Part
15 Intro| Ages was the vernacular Latin of priests and students. Timaeus Part
16 Intro| through the medium of a Latin translation, were profoundly 17 Intro| English word ‘space’ or the Latin ‘spatium.’ Neither Plato 18 Intro| translated by Cicero into Latin. About a fourth, comprehending