Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] won 25 wonder 98 wondered 3 wonderful 77 wonderfully 10 wondering 7 wonders 9 | Frequency [« »] 77 noblest 77 occasion 77 prodicus 77 wonderful 76 actual 76 anyone 76 appeared | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances wonderful |
The Apology Part
1 Text | should like to tell you of a wonderful circumstance. Hitherto the 2 Text | myself, too, shall have a wonderful interest in there meeting Cratylus Part
3 Intro| of the alphabet shows a wonderful insight into the nature Critias Part
4 Text | growing all manner of trees of wonderful height and beauty, owing Euthydemus Part
5 Text | you ask, Crito, they are wonderful— consummate! I never knew 6 Text | perceiving that something wonderful might shortly be expected. 7 Text | to me appears to be quite wonderful, and suicidal as well as 8 Text | indeed, I said, what a wonderful thing, and what a great 9 Text | clever man, and composes wonderful speeches.~SOCRATES: Now Euthyphro Part
10 Text | young?~SOCRATES: He brings a wonderful accusation against me, which 11 Text | Socrates; and things more wonderful still, of which the world Laws Book
12 1 | secret service, in which wonderful endurance is shown—our people 13 3 | and might have had such wonderful results for the Hellenes, 14 4 | have preludes framed with wonderful care. But of the truer and 15 5 | greatly he undervalues this wonderful possession; nor, again, 16 7 | study which you describe as wonderful and fitting for youth to 17 10 | by some extraordinary and wonderful power.~Cleinias. Yes, certainly; 18 11 | figure of an ancestor is a wonderful thing, far higher than that 19 12 | see why there is nothing wonderful in states going astray—the 20 12 | aims; nor is there anything wonderful in some laying down as their 21 12 | we will ask a question:—O wonderful being, and to what are you 22 12 | with numerical exactness so wonderful; and even at that time some Menexenus Part
23 Text | influence of the speaker, more wonderful than ever. This consciousness Meno Part
24 Intro| nature, and has exercised a wonderful charm and interest over Parmenides Part
25 Intro| yesterday. Your enthusiasm is a wonderful gift; but I fear that unless 26 Intro| truth or error, exercised a wonderful influence over their minds. Phaedo Part
27 Text | being?~What you say has a wonderful truth in it, Socrates, replied 28 Text | doctrine which has always had a wonderful attraction for me, and, 29 Text | sense will acknowledge the wonderful clearness of Socrates’ reasoning.~ 30 Text | Now the earth has divers wonderful regions, and is indeed in 31 Text | ours; there is a purple of wonderful lustre, also the radiance Phaedrus Part
32 Intro| is a far more complex and wonderful being than the serpent Typho. 33 Text | Pericles heard of these wonderful arts, brachylogies and eikonologies Philebus Part
34 Intro| But observing that the wonderful construction of number and 35 Intro| organization of knowledge wonderful to think of at a time when 36 Text | be many or many one, are wonderful propositions; and he who 37 Text | fire in the universe is wonderful in quantity and beauty, 38 Text | them also full of the most wonderful pleasures? need I remind Protagoras Part
39 Text | ill? There is nothing very wonderful in this; for, as I have The Republic Book
40 3 | as a sweet and holy and wonderful being; but we must also 41 3 | is among his fellows, is wonderful in the precautions which 42 4 | there would be nothing wonderful in that. ~And yet rich men 43 7 | friends, what are these wonderful numbers about which you 44 9 | this same interval. ~What a wonderful calculation! And how enormous The Sophist Part
45 Text | one true answer: he is the wonderful Sophist, of whom we are 46 Text | clearly; verily he is a wonderful and inscrutable creature. 47 Text | them an adversary, like the wonderful ventriloquist, Eurycles, 48 Text | are also the creation of a wonderful skill.~THEAETETUS: What The Statesman Part
49 Text | others which are still more wonderful, have a common origin; many 50 Text | SOCRATES: There is nothing wonderful in that.~STRANGER: Could The Symposium Part
51 Intro| he would thereby gain a wonderful opportunity of receiving 52 Intro| the Clouds. He is the most wonderful of human beings, and absolutely 53 Text | Love is a mighty god, and wonderful among gods and men, but 54 Text | and men, but especially wonderful in his birth. For he is 55 Text | whence I learn how great and wonderful and universal is the deity 56 Text | that Agathon would make a wonderful oration, and that I should 57 Text | and a performer far more wonderful than Marsyas. He indeed 58 Text | what he knew, for I had a wonderful opinion of the attractions 59 Text | whole night having this wonderful monster in my arms. This 60 Text | compelled beat us all at that,—wonderful to relate! no human being Theaetetus Part
61 Intro| Physiology speaks to us of the wonderful apparatus of nerves, muscles, 62 Text | of oil; at his age, it is wonderful.~SOCRATES: That is good 63 Text | into most ridiculous and wonderful contradictions, as Protagoras 64 Text | the nature of opinion with wonderful exactness.~SOCRATES: Or 65 Text | departed.~THEAETETUS: Yes, with wonderful celerity.~SOCRATES: Yes, Timaeus Part
66 Intro| nature of God which have a wonderful depth and power; but we 67 Intro| the sun. Other periods of wonderful length and complexity are 68 Intro| patterns of the true in a wonderful and inexplicable manner. 69 Intro| world, with which by their wonderful and unchangeable nature 70 Intro| cyclical year, in which periods wonderful for their complexity are 71 Intro| geographical. Is it not a wonderful thing that a few pages of 72 Intro| Proclus on the Timaeus is a wonderful monument of the silliness 73 Text | the gods.~Many great and wonderful deeds are recorded of your 74 Text | Atlantis there was a great and wonderful empire which had rule over 75 Text | of our childhood make a wonderful impression on our memories; 76 Text | after their patterns in a wonderful and inexplicable manner, 77 Text | rightly, will find that such wonderful phenomena are attributable