Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
others-are 1
others-honour 1
otherwise 14
ought 42
ouk 3
our 249
ours 6
Frequency    [«  »]
42 language
42 life
42 love
42 ought
42 pleasure
42 whole
41 else
Aristotle
Rethoric

IntraText - Concordances

ought

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | judges are not what they ought to be, the defeat must be 2 I, 1 | absurd to hold that a man ought to be ashamed of being unable 3 I, 4 | to National Defence: he ought to know all about the methods 4 I, 5 | some part of happiness, we ought to do; whatever destroys 5 I, 5 | rise to its opposite, we ought not to do.~We may define 6 I, 6 | utility is a good thing. We ought therefore to assure ourselves 7 I, 6 | good thing as that which ought to be chosen for its own 8 I, 6 | whatever they feel they ought to have but lack-such things 9 I, 13| The actions that we ought to do or not to do have 10 I, 14| then the doer of the wrong ought in justice to receive a 11 I, 15| to be let off sooner. We ought to be able to quote cases, 12 I, 15| and that your opponent ought not to want other judges 13 II, 2 | and the man who thinks he ought to be a ruler demands the 14 II, 2 | the man whom he thinks he ought to be ruling. Hence it has 15 II, 2 | we feel that our friends ought to treat us well and not 16 II, 3 | seen, means this. Hence we ought always to inflict a preliminary 17 II, 8 | a source from which good ought to have come; and the frequent 18 II, 9 | distresses, or failures we ought to feel pleased, or at least 19 II, 10| envy those who have what we ought to have, or have got what 20 II, 11| the assumption that they ought to be good men, they are 21 II, 11| such goods because they ought, in their belief, to belong 22 II, 20| e.g. "Public officials ought not to be selected by lot. 23 II, 20| a ship’s crew, as if we ought to take the man on whom 24 II, 21| the words Mortal creatures ought to cherish mortal, not immortal 25 II, 21| It is not true that we ought to know ourselves: anyhow, 26 II, 21| to say, for instance, "We ought not to follow the saying 27 II, 23| each individual among you ought to think of his own city’ 28 II, 23| own city’s reputation, you ought all to think of the reputation 29 II, 23| be, "On the contrary, you ought to take to public speaking: 30 II, 25| concluded that "that allowance ought to be made for drunken offenders, 31 II, 25| piece of reasoning. For they ought to decide by considering 32 III, 1 | not enough to know what we ought to say; we must also say 33 III, 1 | we must also say it as we ought; much help is thus afforded 34 III, 1 | trying to delight them: we ought in fairness to fight our 35 III, 10| effect. The words, too, ought to set the scene before 36 III, 10| before our eyes; for events ought to be seen in progress rather 37 III, 13| final refutation". But we ought only to bring in a new name 38 III, 14| piece of advice, thus: "We ought to honour good men and so 39 III, 14| praising Aristeides" or "We ought to honour those who are 40 III, 14| therefore no introduction ought to be employed where the 41 III, 17| this would run, "If we ought to come to terms when doing 42 III, 17| greatest advantage, then we ought to come to terms in the


IntraText® (V89) Copyright 1996-2007 EuloTech SRL