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gave 14
gela 1
gelo 7
general 57
generally 42
generals 13
generalship 4
Frequency    [«  »]
59 three
59 under
58 further
57 general
57 hence
57 often
57 slave
Aristotle
Politics

IntraText - Concordances

general

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, VIII| and provision of food in general, parts of the wealth-getting 2 I, IX | neither is this the aim of the general’s or of the physician’s 3 I, XIII| intemperate, or note So in general we may ask about the natural 4 II, V | sense common, but, as a general rule, private; for, when 5 II, V | a community will be the general form of the state. The citizens 6 II, V | or Penestae, or slaves in general. And whether community of 7 II, VI | live well"; this is too general a conception. Further, a 8 II, VIII| distinction led him into a general eccentricity of life, which 9 II, VIII| allows him ten minae (or in general the suitor asks for more 10 II, VIII| held guilty. Again, men in general desire the good, and not 11 II, XI | on their side. For men in general think that magistrates should 12 III, IV | certainly first obtain some general notion of the virtue of 13 III, IV | would learn the duties of a general of cavalry by being under 14 III, IV | being under the orders of a general of cavalry, or the duties 15 III, IV | cavalry, or the duties of a general of infantry by being under 16 III, IV | being under the orders of a general of infantry, and by having 17 III, VI | gymnastic, and the arts in general, which are only accidentally 18 III, XI | physicians, so ought men in general to be called to account 19 III, XI | to the difficulty of any general principle embracing all 20 III, XII | against freedom, height in general may be so measured. Thus 21 III, XII | virtue, even if virtue in general excels height still more, 22 III, XIV | functions; the king was a general and a judge, and had the 23 III, XV | there should be a perpetual general, and if so, should the office 24 III, XV | that the laws speak only in general terms, and cannot provide 25 III, XV | cannot dispense with the general principle which exists in 26 III, XVI | aristocracy, there may be a general holding office for life, 27 IV, I | best suited to states in general; for political writers, 28 IV, II | time adapted to states in general; (3) of the other forms 29 IV, IX | government—but through the general willingness of all classes 30 IV, XI | government which states in general can attain. As to those 31 IV, XII | begin by assuming, as a general principle common to all 32 IV, XIV | the subject not only in general but with reference to particular 33 IV, XV | like the office of the general who superintends them when 34 IV, XV | person see to good order in general, or one look after the boys, 35 IV, XV | power: the power of the general, for example, is not the 36 V, IV | errors in the other parts. In general, when the notables quarrel, 37 V, V | the demagogue was also a general, and then democracies changed 38 V, VI | hire mercenaries, and the general who is in command of them 39 V, VII | Lacedaemon, Pausanias, who was general in the Persian War, or like 40 V, VII | and avaricious; and, in general, whichever way the constitution 41 V, VIII| preserving constitutions in general, and in particular cases. 42 V, VIII| it is well to compare the general valuation of property with 43 V, VIII| revenue should be made at a general assembly of the citizens, 44 V, IX | suppose, for example, a good general is a bad man and not a friend 45 V, IX | Thus in the choice of a general, we should regard his skill 46 V, X | against Amadocus, whose general he was.~And sometimes men 47 V, XI | insolence of power, and in general he should compensate the 48 V, XI | details; what should be the general policy of the tyrant is 49 VI, IV | laws and customs. The more general causes which tend to destroy 50 VII, IV | government. For who can be the general of such a vast multitude, 51 VII, V | difficult to determine the general character of the territory 52 VII, X | common meals, there is a general agreement that a well ordered 53 VII, XIV | supposed to excel mankind in general (having in the first place 54 VII, XIV | the sake of exercising a general despotism, and in the third 55 VII, XVI | we will only make a few general remarks at present. The 56 VII, XVI | be held disgraceful, in general, for any man or woman to 57 VIII, VII | legislator, stating the general principles.~We accept the


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