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north 4
nose 3
not 847
notables 40
notably 1
note 4
notes 2
Frequency    [«  »]
40 matters
40 modes
40 money
40 notables
40 says
39 cities
39 difficulty
Aristotle
Politics

IntraText - Concordances

notables

   Book, Paragraph
1 II, XII | magistrates he appointed from the notables and the men of wealth, that 2 IV, III | There are also among the notables differences of wealth and 3 IV, IV | common people and in the notables various classes are included; 4 IV, IV | other classes as well. The notables again may be divided according 5 IV, XII | But where the rich and the notables exceed in quality more than 6 IV, XIV | together—the people with the notables and the notables with the 7 IV, XIV | with the notables and the notables with the people. It is also 8 IV, XIV | balance the number of the notables, or that the number in excess 9 V, III | enemy. Thus at Rhodes the notables conspired against the people 10 V, III | defeat in which many of the notables were slain in a battle with 11 V, III | the Peloponnesian War, the notables were reduced in number, 12 V, III | and in democracies the notables revolt, because they are 13 V, IV | parts. In general, when the notables quarrel, the whole city 14 V, IV | democracy. At Argos, the notables, having distinguished themselves 15 V, IV | people, uniting with the notables, killed Phoxus the tyrant, 16 V, V | demagogues arose, and the notables combined. At Rhodes the 17 V, V | demagogues, which drove out the notables, who came back in a body 18 V, V | demagogues drove out many of the notables in order that they might 19 V, V | with the people, wrong the notables and so force them to combine; 20 V, V | rich; his enmity to the notables won for him the confidence 21 V, VI | considerable change. For the notables fell out among themselves, 22 V, VI | and choosing one of the notables to be their leader, attacked 23 V, VII | increased in number. The notables had previously acquired 24 V, VII | incline to oligarchy, the notables are apt to be grasping; 25 V, VII | pass into few hands, the notables can do too much as they 26 V, VIII| contentions and quarrels of the notables, and to prevent those who 27 V, VIII| aristocracy be combined; for both notables and people might have their 28 V, VIII| aim of democracy, and the notables would be magistrates, which 29 V, VIII| work and grow rich, and the notables will not be governed by 30 V, X | their protector against the notables, and in order to prevent 31 V, X | their accusation of the notables. At any rate this was the 32 V, X | art of making war upon the notables and destroying them secretly 33 V, XI | friends, the people with the notables, and the rich with one another. 34 V, XI | life; he should win the notables by companionship, and the 35 VI, IV | good). The good and the notables will then be satisfied, 36 VI, IV | commonalty exceeds that of the notables and of the middle class— 37 VI, IV | becomes disorderly, and the notables grow excited and impatient 38 VI, V | the popular party, but the notables, although the citizens ought 39 VI, V | presses hardly upon the notables (for the money must be obtained 40 VI, VII | the government, and the notables will have memorials of their


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