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| Alphabetical [« »] lampido 1 lamprus 1 lampsacus 2 land 157 land-animal 1 land-herds 2 landed 4 | Frequency [« »] 159 try 158 definition 158 various 157 land 157 previous 156 company 156 days | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances land |
Critias
Part
1 Intro| obtained as their lot the land of Attica, a land suited
2 Intro| lot the land of Attica, a land suited to the growth of
3 Intro| inhabitants of this fair land were endowed with intelligence
4 Intro| varying in size, two of land and three of sea, which
5 Intro| and cold, and supplied the land with all things needed for
6 Intro| passed through the zones of land from the island to the sea.
7 Intro| triremes and stores. The land between the harbour and
8 Text | their common portion this land, which was naturally adapted
9 Text | names of the chiefs of the land, but very little about their
10 Text | the limit on the left. The land was the best in the world,
11 Text | called a remnant of the land that then was? The whole
12 Text | the mere skeleton of the land being left. But in the primitive
13 Text | for cattle. Moreover, the land reaped the benefit of the
14 Text | righteously administered their own land and the rest of Hellas;
15 Text | alternate zones of sea and land larger and smaller, encircling
16 Text | another; there were two of land and three of water, which
17 Text | grew and thrived in that land; also the fruit which admits
18 Text | the bridges the zones of land which parted the zones of
19 Text | breadth, and the zone of land which came next of equal
20 Text | one of water, the other of land, were two stadia, and the
21 Text | arrangement of the rest of the land. The whole country was said
22 Text | summer the water which the land supplied by introducing
23 Text | afterwards directed against our land for the following reasons,
Crito
Part
24 Intro| an enemy. Possibly in a land of misrule like Thessaly
Euthydemus
Part
25 Text | and honours in one’s own land, are goods?~He assented.~
The First Alcibiades
Part
26 Text | large tract of excellent land, extending for nearly a
Gorgias
Part
27 Text | as possible for his own land?~CALLICLES: How you go on,
Laws
Book
28 2 | penalties on any one in all the land who should dare to say that
29 3 | desert and a vast expanse of land; a herd or two of oxen would
30 3 | of travelling either by land or sea had been almost entirely
31 3 | and from their pasture–land they would obtain the greater
32 3 | in particular of those of land or naval warfare, and likewise
33 3 | against Troy—by sea as well as land—for at that time men were
34 3 | disturb the possession of land, or to abolish debts, because
35 3 | Dorians for distributing the land—there was nothing to hinder
36 3 | glorious victories both by land and sea, but what, in my
37 3 | shepherds—sons of a rugged land, which is a stern mother,
38 3 | armament, both by sea and on land, caused a helpless terror,
39 3 | salvation for them either by land or by sea, for there was
40 3 | happen again, at least on land; nor, when they looked to
41 4 | and that these battles by land made the Hellenes better;
42 5 | have escaped division of land and the abolition of debts;
43 5 | those who have abundance of land, and having also many debtors,
44 5 | the distribution of the land? In the first place, the
45 5 | have to be formed; and the land and the houses will then
46 5 | these shall be owners of the land and protectors of the allotment.
47 5 | allotment. The houses and the land will be divided in the same
48 5 | taxes and divisions of the land. These properties of number
49 5 | at once distribute their land and houses, and not till
50 5 | houses, and not till the land in common, since a community
51 5 | greatest empire by sea and land;—this they imagine to be
52 5 | those which are of good land shall be smaller. while
53 5 | two such sections; one of land near the city, the other
54 5 | near the city, the other of land which is at a distance.
55 5 | further, the situation of the land with the city in the middle
56 6 | for as follows:—The entire land has been already distributed
57 6 | harm instead of good to the land, when they come down from
58 6 | an outlaw from his native land, rather than bow his neck
59 7 | great deal of hunting of land animals of all kinds, and
60 7 | hunting and catching of land animals, of which the one
61 8 | their food from sea and land, but our citizens from land
62 8 | land, but our citizens from land only. And this makes the
63 8 | at the extremity of the land, of any stranger who is
64 8 | boundaries of his neighbour’s land, and if any one does, let
65 8 | convicted of re–dividing the land by stealth or by force,
66 8 | encroaching on his neighbour’s land; for any man may easily
67 8 | encroaches on his neighbour’s land, and transgresses his boundaries,
68 8 | cattle on his neighbour’s land, they shall see the injury,
69 8 | own and his neighbour’s land, he shall be punished, in
70 8 | common stream on to his own land, if he do not cut off the
71 8 | him dig down on his own land as far as the clay, and
72 8 | Arcturus, either on his own land or on that of others—let
73 8 | pluck them from his own land; and if from his neighbour’
74 8 | if from his neighbour’s land, a mina, and if from any
75 8 | he take them off his own land, let him pluck them how
76 8 | consent of the owner of the land, he shall be beaten with
77 8 | settle, may dwell in the land, but he must practise an
78 9 | beyond the borders of the land. And if he suffers this
79 9 | beyond the borders of the land. But let his children and
80 9 | temple on the borders of the land; or let him pay fines, as
81 9 | case he shall go to another land and country, and there dwell
82 9 | foot at all on his native land, he shall be bound by the
83 9 | but if he be brought by land, and is not his own master,
84 9 | judges to the borders of the land; these during the interval
85 9 | have burial in his native land, but in all other respects
86 9 | him to the borders of the land, and cast him forth unburied,
87 9 | the twelve portions the land, in such places as are uncultivated
88 10 | is in the centre of the land, and let no freeman ever
89 11 | found to have another lot of land in the country, which has
90 11 | of any other parts of the land across the border, in order
91 11 | border, in order that the land may be cleared of this sort
92 11 | and go away into another land, and not speak contrary
93 12 | the sons and heirs of the land.~As to the initiation of
94 12 | forth over sea and over land to find him who is incorruptible—
95 12 | public business from another land, and is to be received with
96 12 | spectators, who come from another land to look at ours. In the
97 12 | if he has them in another land, there shall be no limit
98 12 | what he offers. Now the land and the hearth of the house
99 12 | twelvefold division of the land, and before these the litigants
100 12 | dwelling in the citadel of the land, might become perfect guardians,
Lysis
Part
101 Text | the stranger of another land’?~I do not think that he
Menexenus
Part
102 Text | and living in their own land. And the country which brought
103 Text | should begin by praising the land which is their mother, and
104 Text | mother), so did this our land prove that she was the mother
105 Text | how the children of this land, who were our fathers, held
106 Text | Darius, who extended the land boundaries of the empire
107 Text | they endured by sea and land, and how they repelled them.
108 Text | ward off the barbarians by land, the many by the few; but
109 Text | others not to fear them by land. Third in order, for the
Meno
Part
110 Intro| after many ages in a distant land. It begins to flow again
Parmenides
Part
111 Intro| nature and the law of the land are included, and some of
Phaedo
Part
112 Intro| and corroded; and even the land which is fairer than the
113 Intro| imposed by the law of the land, of all men at all times
Philebus
Part
114 Intro| parents and to the law of the land than about the properties
115 Text | storm-tossed sailor cries, ‘land’ (i.e., earth), reappear
Protagoras
Part
116 Text | sail set out of sight of land into an ocean of words,
The Republic
Book
117 2 | slice of our neighbors' land will be wanted by us for
118 3 | rather be a serf on the land of a poor and portionless
119 3 | will our youth dwell in a land of health, amid fair sights
120 4 | tossing, we have reached land, and are fairly agreed that
121 5 | think of Hellas as their own land, and share in the common
122 6 | creatures who, seeing this land open to them-a land well
123 6 | this land open to them-a land well stocked with fair names
124 6 | which is sown in a foreign land becomes denaturalized, and
125 7 | knowledge is by water or by land, whether he floats or only
126 8 | to acquiring money, and land, and houses, and gold, and
127 8 | agreed to distribute their land and houses among individual
128 8 | debtors, and distributing land to the people and his followers,
129 8 | every sort and from every land. ~Yes, he said, there are. ~
130 9 | certainly will, though in the land of his birth perhaps not,
The Second Alcibiades
Part
131 Text | drive him from his native land, but not when it is better
132 Text | city lost every battle by land and sea and never gained
The Seventh Letter
Part
133 Text | force against his native land he should not use in order
134 Text | Syracuse, his own native land, when he had made an end
The Sophist
Part
135 Intro| animate objects may be either land animals or water animals,
136 Intro| water, and the other of land animals. But at this point
137 Intro| generous youth abide. On land you may hunt tame animals,
138 Text | after swimming animals and land animals?~THEAETETUS: Yes.~
139 Text | the swimming and left the land animals, saying that there
140 Text | While the other goes to land and water of another sort—
141 Text | STRANGER: Of hunting on land there are two principal
142 Text | which hunts animals,—living—land—tame animals; which hunts
The Statesman
Part
143 Intro| should have begun by dividing land animals into bipeds and
144 Intro| of animals, and again of land animals, and these into
145 Text | into the management of land and of water herds.~YOUNG
146 Text | the other the rearing of land herds?~YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.~
147 Text | herds which feed on dry land?~YOUNG SOCRATES: How would
148 Text | begun at first by dividing land animals into biped and quadruped;
149 Text | accordingly as they were land or water herds, winged and
150 Text | extensive, moving or resting on land or water, honourable and
151 Text | going from city to city by land or sea, and giving money
Timaeus
Part
152 Intro| out of fishes who came to land, and of man out of the animals,
153 Text | the sea. Whereas in this land, neither then nor at any
154 Text | there formerly dwelt in your land the fairest and noblest
155 Text | temperament of the seasons in that land would produce the wisest
156 Text | sea, and the surrounding land may be most truly called
157 Text | fourth, the pedestrian and land creatures. Of the heavenly