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gratitude 2
grave 2
graves 1
great 48
greater 56
greatest 7
greatly 2
Frequency    [«  »]
48 arguments
48 enthymemes
48 given
48 great
48 pity
47 hence
47 opponent
Aristotle
Rethoric

IntraText - Concordances

great

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | defined for him.~Now, it is of great moment that well-drawn laws 2 I, 1 | speech unjustly might do great harm, that is a charge which 3 I, 3 | justice or injustice, is great or small, either absolutely 4 I, 4 | also when it is pushed a great deal too far; just as the 5 I, 7 | smaller" or "less", while "great" and "small", "much" and " 6 I, 7 | with normal magnitude. The "great" is that which surpasses 7 I, 7 | and similarly, unusually great love of friends being more 8 I, 7 | honourable than unusually great love of money, ordinary 9 I, 7 | makes the impression of great superiority), and partly 10 I, 9 | faculty of conferring many great benefits, and benefits of 11 I, 9 | surpass men who are themselves great. It is only natural that 12 I, 11| felt to afford us either great delight or great but not 13 I, 11| either great delight or great but not painful benefit. 14 I, 12| large body of friends, or a great deal of money. Their confidence 15 I, 12| same is true of crimes so great and terrible that no man 16 I, 12| have either no enemies or a great many; if you have none, 17 I, 12| detected; if you have a great many, you will be watched, 18 I, 12| be got by wrong-doing is great or certain or immediate, 19 I, 15| form of evidence, to which great weight is often attached 20 II, 2 | Hence it has been said~Great is the wrath of kings, whose 21 II, 2 | long afterward also,~their great resentment being due to 22 II, 2 | resentment being due to their great superiority. Then again 23 II, 5 | mean only such as amount to great pains or losses. And even 24 II, 5 | by whatever we feel has great power of destroying or of 25 II, 5 | ways that tend to cause us great pain. Hence the very indications 26 II, 5 | they a are, in the midst of great prosperity, and are in consequence 27 II, 7 | person helped. Kindness is great if shown to one who is in 28 II, 7 | if shown to one who is in great need, or who needs what 29 II, 7 | us, because our need is great and the occasion pressing; 30 II, 7 | kind, some other kind as great or greater. We now see to 31 II, 8 | happen to them), nor yet by great fear (panic-stricken people 32 II, 8 | e.g. the arrival of the Great King’s gifts for Diopeithes 33 II, 10| envious, for everything seems great to them. The good things 34 II, 12| think themselves equal to great things-and that means having 35 II, 17| because they aspire to do the great deeds that their power permits 36 II, 17| not on a small but on a great scale.~Good fortune in certain 37 II, 19| the lesser, and generally great things and small, what we 38 II, 21| bad men excessively." One great advantage of Maxims to a 39 II, 22| military or both, and how great it is; what their revenues 40 II, 23| lines:~God gives to many great prosperity,~Not of good 41 II, 24| invitation to dinner is a great honour, for it was because 42 II, 25| probability is particularly great.~(2) Fallible Signs, and 43 II, 26| to show that a thing is great or small; just as there 44 III, 2 | fact that metaphor is of great value both in poetry and 45 III, 12| this illusion, has made a great deal of though he has mentioned 46 III, 14| new tale, how there came great warfare to Europe~Out of 47 III, 15| praise some trifling merit at great length, and then attack 48 III, 17| the other side contains a great variety of arguments, begin


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