| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] sparta 12 spartan 13 spartans 6 speak 30 speaking 25 speaks 3 special 23 | Frequency [« »] 30 pleasure 30 possible 30 rather 30 speak 29 business 29 divided 29 friends | Aristotle Politics IntraText - Concordances speak |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, II | equivocal sense, as we might speak of a stone hand; for when 2 I, III | speaking of the state we must speak of the management of the 3 I, III | considered by us.~Let us first speak of master and slave, looking 4 I, VI | nature. The law of which I speak is a sort of convention— 5 I, XI | of wealth-getting I now speak generally; a minute consideration 6 I, XIII | to be discussed when we speak of the different forms of 7 I, XIII | of what remains, let us speak at another time. Regarding, 8 II, III | way in which people would speak who had their had their 9 III, III | identical. And in this manner we speak of every union or composition 10 III, IX | different forms of government speak of a part of justice only.~ 11 III, XI | which the laws are unable to speak with precision owing to 12 III, XV | royalty maintain that the laws speak only in general terms, and 13 III, XVIII| conclusions, we must proceed to speak of the perfect state, and 14 IV, I | required. Others, again, speak of a more attainable form, 15 IV, IV | parts. If we were going to speak of the different species 16 IV, VIII | VIII~I have yet to speak of the so-called polity 17 IV, VIII | discussion. Last of all I will speak of tyranny, which I place 18 IV, X | tyranny I have still to speak, in order that it may have 19 IV, XI | of this hereafter, when I speak of the revolutions of states. 20 IV, XIV | discussion, we will proceed to speak of the points which follow 21 IV, XVI | strangers: I would rather speak of political cases, which, 22 V, I | ancestors. Here then, so to speak, are opened the very springs 23 V, X | X~I have still to speak of monarchy, and the causes 24 V, XI | And they are preserved, to speak generally, by the opposite 25 VI, I | incline to democracies.~When I speak of the combinations which 26 VI, I | established.~First of all let us speak of democracy, which will 27 VII, VII | citizens, we will proceed to speak of what should be their 28 VII, XVI | consider more carefully when we speak of the education of children, 29 VIII, VII | the subject; we shall only speak of it now after the manner 30 VIII, VII | explanation, but when hereafter we speak of poetry, we will treat