| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] within 2 without 7 wood 1 word 23 words 10 would 20 writing 1 | Frequency [« »] 23 he 23 predicate 23 say 23 word 22 positive 22 yet 21 all | Aristotle On Interpretation IntraText - Concordances word |
Paragraph
1 1 | proof of this, consider the word "goat-stag." It has significance, 2 2 | independent meaning. Thus in the word "pirate-boat" the word " 3 2 | the word "pirate-boat" the word "boat" has no meaning except 4 2 | except as part of the whole word.~The limitation "by convention" 5 4 | judgement. Let me explain. The word "human" has meaning, but 6 4 | separate one syllable of the word "human" from the other, 7 4 | meaning; similarly in the word "mouse", the part "ouse" 8 7 | universal character; for the word "every" does not make the 9 8 | are white"; provided the word "white" has one meaning. 10 8 | on the other hand, one word has two meanings which do 11 9 | for the meaning of the word "fortuitous" with regard 12 10| the proper sense of the word, but an indefinite noun, 13 10| which applied when the word "is" was added.~Thus we 14 10| must be attached to the word "man", for the word "every" 15 10| the word "man", for the word "every" does not give to 16 11| thing. do not apply this word "one" to those things which, 17 11| biped" are implicit in the word "man". On the other hand, 18 11| independent sense of the word.~Thus, in the case of those 19 13| results, even where the word is used always in the same 20 13| sense.~But in some cases the word is used equivocally. For 21 13| unqualified sense of the word, we can predicate the former.~ 22 13| every sense in which the word may be used.~We may perhaps 23 14| contraries.~Now if the spoken word corresponds with the judgement