Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
belonged 13
belonging 21
belongings 13
belongs 68
beloved 122
below 110
below-cocytus 1
Frequency    [«  »]
68 analysis
68 anytus
68 bear
68 belongs
68 connected
68 educated
68 expressed
Plato
Partial collection

IntraText - Concordances

belongs

The Apology
   Part
1 Intro| Symposium of Xenophon, who belongs to an entirely different Cratylus Part
2 Intro| attribute to the one what belongs to the other. Again, when 3 Intro| is it entirely lost. It belongs chiefly to early language, 4 Text | of the class to which he belongs, just as in the case which 5 Text | attributes to each that which belongs to them and is like them?~ Critias Part
6 Text | common the virtue which belongs to them without distinction Euthydemus Part
7 Intro| likeness; (2) the Euthydemus belongs to the Socratic period in The First Alcibiades Part
8 Intro| ourselves, we cannot know what belongs to ourselves or belongs 9 Intro| belongs to ourselves or belongs to others, and are unfit 10 Text | when he takes care of what belongs to him?~ALCIBIADES: I should 11 Text | takes care of that which belongs to his feet?~ALCIBIADES: 12 Text | shoemaking of that which belongs to our feet?~ALCIBIADES: 13 Text | graving rings of that which belongs to our hands?~ALCIBIADES: 14 Text | Then in taking care of what belongs to you, you do not take 15 Text | cherishes not himself, but what belongs to him?~ALCIBIADES: That 16 Text | whereas other men love what belongs to you; and your beauty, 17 Text | that a man may know what belongs to him and yet not know Ion Part
18 Intro| in the Ion. The rhapsode belongs to the realm of imitation Laws Book
19 4 | that all which a man has belongs to those who gave him birth 20 8 | the spring which clearly belongs to some other owner; and 21 9 | no house of all the 5040 belongs to the inhabitant or to 22 10 | makes use of anything which belongs to them, not having their 23 10 | temperate and to possess mind belongs to virtue, and the contrary 24 10 | also the whole of heaven belongs?~Cleinias. Certainly.~Athenian. 25 11 | remove the least thing which belongs to me without my consent; 26 11 | of having anything which belongs to him, whether little or 27 11 | the property in dispute belongs to other, if the property Menexenus Part
28 Text | of such a one the wealth belongs to another, and not to himself. Meno Part
29 Intro| origin and nature of ideas belongs to the infancy of philosophy; Parmenides Part
30 Intro| without end. The difficulty belongs in fact to the Megarian 31 Intro| of them. The Parmenides belongs to that stage of the dialogues 32 Intro| The Parmenides of Plato belongs to a stage of philosophy 33 Text | is in relation to it and belongs to it?~True.~And since we 34 Text | Certainly.~Difference, then, belongs to it as well as knowledge; Phaedo Part
35 Intro| appears to be forgotten. It belongs rather to the intermediate 36 Intro| inseparable from the ideas, and belongs to the world of the invisible 37 Text | the youth to whom the lyre belongs? And this is recollection. 38 Text | the body, because to her belongs the essence of which the Phaedrus Part
39 Intro| or ‘the great name which belongs to God alone;’ or ‘the saying 40 Text | that is a great name which belongs to God alone,—lovers of Philebus Part
41 Intro| subject, that the Philebus belongs to the later period of his 42 Intro| distinction is unmeaning, and belongs to a stage of philosophy 43 Intro| And remember that mind belongs to the class which we term 44 Text | the class to which mind belongs and what is the power of 45 Text | class to which pleasure belongs has also been long ago discovered?~ 46 Text | pleasure is infinite and belongs to the class which neither The Republic Book
47 3 | habitations, and all that belongs to them, should be such 48 4 | unhappiness; the city in fact belongs to them, but they are none 49 4 | what is a man's own, and belongs to him? ~Very true. ~Think, 50 6 | cannot help loving all that belongs or is akin to the object 51 6 | winds, and whatever else belongs to his art, if he intends 52 10 | merely external evil which belongs to another? ~Yes, he said, The Seventh Letter Part
53 Text | worth mentioning at all, belongs to things soulless; but The Sophist Part
54 Intro| positive class to which he belongs, there are endless negative 55 Text | falsehood is a reality and belongs to the class of real being.~ The Statesman Part
56 Intro| blessed and spontaneous life belongs not to this, but to the 57 Intro| for our king a god, who belongs to the other cycle, instead 58 Text | too is a vocation which belongs to him.~YOUNG SOCRATES: 59 Text | must divide the part which belongs at once both to wool-working The Symposium Part
60 Text | some one who calls what belongs to him the good, and what 61 Text | to him the good, and what belongs to another the evil. For Theaetetus Part
62 Intro| not ‘the just and true,’ belongs to the sphere of the future.~ 63 Text | and busy in enquiring what belongs to such a nature to do or 64 Text | which this common quality belongs.~THEAETETUS: I understand Timaeus Part
65 Intro| and the intelligent; it belongs to the class of (Greek). 66 Intro| 1) To the first class belongs the teleological theory 67 Text | origin of flesh, or what belongs to flesh, or of that part 68 Text | bases is firmly posed and belongs to the class which offers


Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (V89) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2007. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License