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| Alphabetical [« »] thoughtful 2 thoughtless 1 thoughts 161 thousand 120 thousands 22 thousandth 1 thracian 10 | Frequency [« »] 120 opinions 120 required 120 rich 120 thousand 119 bodily 119 intelligence 119 opposites | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances thousand |
The Apology
Part
1 Intro| obedience to the god, even if a thousand deaths await him.~He is
2 Text | have incurred a fine of a thousand drachmae.~And so he proposes
Charmides
Part
3 PreS | world has grown older in two thousand years, and has enlarged
4 PreS | separated by an interval of a thousand years, yet they seem to
Cratylus
Part
5 Intro| acquired a new power. Many thousand times he exercises this
6 Intro| of ten, twenty, a hundred thousand years ago, has passed away
Critias
Part
7 Intro| country was divided into sixty thousand lots, each of which was
8 Intro| war-chariot, so as to make up ten thousand chariots, two horses and
9 Intro| city numbering about twenty thousand inhabitants with the barbaric
10 Text | first of all, that nine thousand was the sum of years which
11 Text | taken place during the nine thousand years, for that is the number
12 Text | is to say, about twenty thousand. Such were the ancient Athenians,
13 Text | extending in one direction three thousand stadia, but across the centre
14 Text | centre inland it was two thousand stadia. This part of the
15 Text | of the plain, and was ten thousand stadia in length. It received
16 Text | of all the lots was sixty thousand. And of the inhabitants
17 Text | to make up a total of ten thousand chariots; also two horses
Gorgias
Part
18 Intro| sense ought to rule over ten thousand fools? ‘Yes, that is my
19 Intro| as happy, and we would a thousand times rather have their
20 Intro| understood by the many; he is a thousand miles away from the questions
21 Intro| social life, better than a thousand sermons? Plato, like the
22 Text | often be superior to ten thousand fools, and he ought to rule
23 Text | one is superior to the ten thousand?~CALLICLES: Yes; that is
Ion
Part
24 Text | presence of more than twenty thousand friendly faces, when there
Laws
Book
25 1 | assaults; others about ten thousand other such matters. But
26 1 | Ceans (and there are ten thousand other instances of the same
27 1 | which is the source of ten thousand acts of injustice, by making
28 2 | forms which they had ten thousand years ago;—this is literally
29 2 | Athenian. There are ten thousand likenesses of objects of
30 3 | were unknown during ten thousand times ten thousand years.
31 3 | during ten thousand times ten thousand years. And no more than
32 3 | years. And no more than a thousand or two thousand years have
33 3 | more than a thousand or two thousand years have elapsed since
34 3 | they were attacked by a thousand vessels and more. One chance
35 4 | once it is surmounted, ten thousand or rather all blessings
36 7 | music is always made ten thousand times better by attaining
37 8 | would be the source of ten thousand blessings. For, in the first
38 10 | able to move itself is ten thousand times superior to all the
39 12 | highest dass, he shall pay a thousand drachmae; or if he be of
40 12 | nature, but he shall pay a thousand drachmae, if he be of the
41 12 | witnesses if the sum be under a thousand drachmae, and of not less
42 12 | witnesses if the sum be above a thousand drachmae. The agent of a
Meno
Part
43 Intro| his treachery to the ten thousand Greeks, which Xenophon has
Parmenides
Part
44 Intro| members, and that, in a thousand ways, the like partakes
Phaedo
Part
45 Intro| for them a hundred or a thousand years after death, and ask
46 Intro| out of life a hundred or a thousand years ago. Do we imagine
47 Intro| become deadened after a thousand years? or what is the nature
48 Intro| difference is the effect of a few thousand, the second of a few hundred
49 Intro| inflicted a hundred or a thousand years after an offence had
50 Intro| them, and that for thirty thousand years they were to be ‘fugitives
51 Intro| emotions after more than two thousand years have passed away.~
52 Text | one instance out of ten thousand of the opposition of the
53 Text | and he would assign ten thousand other causes of the same
Phaedrus
Part
54 Intro| of joy in heaven. When a thousand years have elapsed the souls
55 Intro| complete a cycle of ten thousand years before their wings
56 Intro| over Greek literature for a thousand years afterwards. Yet doubtless
57 Intro| at the completion of ten thousand years all are to return
58 Intro| from nature,’ while ten thousand reviewers (mala murioi)
59 Intro| spreads over much more than a thousand years. And from this decline
60 Intro| creative power? Why did a thousand years invent nothing better
61 Intro| controversy. For more than a thousand years not a single writer
62 Intro| is likely that in every thousand persons there is at least
63 Text | deteriorates his lot.~Ten thousand years must elapse before
64 Text | the recurring periods of a thousand years; he is distinguished
65 Text | who gains wings in three thousand years:—and they who choose
66 Text | away at the end of three thousand years. But the others (The
67 Text | at the end of the first thousand years the good souls and
68 Text | during a period of nine thousand years, and leave you a fool
Philebus
Part
69 Intro| first place. But mind is ten thousand times nearer to the chief
70 Intro| also truly add that for two thousand years and more, utility,
71 Intro| ambition, may be perverted in a thousand ways. But of that religion
72 Text | light and heavy, and in ten thousand other ways?~SOCRATES: Those,
73 Text | true.~SOCRATES: I omit ten thousand other things, such as beauty
74 Text | insist that every unit in ten thousand must be the same as every
75 Text | they are the source of ten thousand hindrances to us; they trouble
76 Text | of another, mind is ten thousand times nearer and more akin
Protagoras
Part
77 Text | drinks, medicines, and ten thousand other things, which are
The Republic
Book
78 7 | habit, you will see ten thousand times better than the inhabitants
79 7 | more precious far than ten thousand bodily eyes, for by it alone
80 9 | State, do not come within a thousand miles of the tyrant; when
81 10 | be full of these and ten thousand similar oppositions occurring
82 10 | condition, disfigured by ten thousand ills. But not there, Glaucon,
83 10 | now the journey lasted a thousand years), while those from
84 10 | thus paid ten times in a thousand years. If, for example,
85 10 | Now this Ardiaeus lived a thousand years before the time of
86 10 | and in the pilgrimage of a thousand years which we have been
The Seventh Letter
Part
87 Text | property. For a city of ten thousand householders their numbers
The Sophist
Part
88 Intro| lifted up ‘which reached to a thousand years because of the god.’
89 Intro| undeciphered, unless two thousand years and more afterwards
90 Intro| harm. Even if it were a thousand times worse than it is,
91 Intro| nothing without him. Through a thousand personal influences they
92 Intro| short space of one or two thousand years?~Again, we have a
93 Text | which instances and in ten thousand others we not only speak
94 Text | others,’ ‘in itself,’ and ten thousand more, which they cannot
The Statesman
Part
95 Intro| division of number into ten thousand and all other numbers, instead
96 Intro| considering that more than two thousand years later mankind are
97 Intro| Heracleitus says, ‘One is ten thousand if he be the best.’ If,
98 Intro| Athens—the rule of the Five Thousand— characterized by Thucydides
99 Text | you were to cut off ten thousand from all the rest, and make
100 Text | selecting him out of ten thousand other claimants to be the
101 Text | All these stories, and ten thousand others which are still more
102 Text | and I might tell of ten thousand other blessings, which belonged
103 Text | deciding that they would be a thousand times happier than the men
104 Text | earth or stone, and ten thousand other things? all of which
105 Text | perhaps, in a city of a thousand men, there would be a hundred,
The Symposium
Part
106 Text | presence of more than thirty thousand Hellenes.~You are mocking,
107 Text | would be ready to die a thousand deaths rather than endure
Theaetetus
Part
108 Intro| admit that one man may be a thousand times better than another,
109 Intro| landed properties of ten thousand acres or more, he thinks
110 Intro| which are proved to us in a thousand ways by mathematical reasoning
111 Intro| Experience tells us by a thousand proofs that our sensations
112 Text | and I could give you ten thousand examples of similar contradictions,
113 Text | non-existence. Yet one man may be a thousand times better than another
114 Text | you and false to the ten thousand others?~THEODORUS: No other
115 Text | landed proprietors of ten thousand acres and more, our philosopher
Timaeus
Part
116 Intro| of both our cities. Nine thousand years have elapsed since
117 Intro| founded yours, and eight thousand since she founded ours,
118 Intro| confined to a period of six thousand years; he was able to speculate
119 Intro| but in very truth, for ten thousand years’ (Laws); he was aware
120 Text | She founded your city a thousand years before ours (Observe