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Alphabetical    [«  »]
lie 3
lies 8
lieving 1
life 42
life-what 1
lifeless 2
lifetime 2
Frequency    [«  »]
43 yet
42 her
42 language
42 life
42 love
42 ought
42 pleasure
Aristotle
Rethoric

IntraText - Concordances

life

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 5 | virtue; or as independence of life; or as the secure enjoyment 2 I, 5 | luck, in order to make his life really secure. As we have 3 I, 5 | bad, almost half of human life is spoilt.~The constituents 4 I, 5 | either to the preservation of life and the means of life, or 5 I, 5 | of life and the means of life, or to wealth, or to some 6 I, 5 | varies with the time of life. In a young man beauty is 7 I, 5 | live a long and painless life unless he has good luck. 8 I, 5 | indeed, a capacity for long life that is quite independent 9 I, 6 | subsequently, health entails life simultaneously. Things are 10 I, 6 | both of pleasure and of life, and therefore is thought 11 I, 6 | it causes, pleasure and life, are two of the things most 12 I, 6 | the sciences and arts. And life: since, even if no other 13 I, 6 | good were the result of life, it is desirable in itself. 14 I, 7 | subsequently, or potentially. Life accompanies health simultaneously ( 15 I, 7 | simultaneously (but not health life), knowledge accompanies 16 I, 7 | And what is at the end of life is better than what is not, 17 I, 7 | example, that which promotes life, good life, pleasure, and 18 I, 7 | which promotes life, good life, pleasure, and noble conduct. 19 I, 10| law which regulates the life of a particular community; 20 I, 11| in his deeds and in his life. We can well believe the 21 II, 2 | conditions, and periods of life tend to stir men easily 22 II, 4 | dress, and all their way of life. And towards those who do 23 II, 8 | possess all the good things of life, it is clear that the impossibility 24 II, 12| mean youth, the prime of life, and old age. By fortune 25 II, 12| on the first day of one’s life one has nothing at all to 26 II, 12| not yet been humbled by life or learnt its necessary 27 II, 13| often made mistakes; and life on the whole is a bad business. 28 II, 13| they have been humbled by life: their desires are set upon 29 II, 13| form of chill. They love life; and all the more when their 30 II, 13| what is left to them of life is but little as compared 31 II, 13| Hence men at this time of life are often supposed to have 32 II, 14| are united in the prime of life, while all their excesses 33 II, 15| old age, and the prime of life. We will now turn to those 34 II, 19| an object; in practical life, particular facts count 35 II, 20| was being tried for his life, told this story: A fox, 36 III, 1 | in the contests of public life, owing to the defects of 37 III, 2 | comparatively remote from ordinary life. In prose passages they 38 III, 2 | from the speech of ordinary life. This is done in poetry 39 III, 3 | goodly looking-glass of human life",’ talked about "offering 40 III, 9 | slaves"; and "to possess in life or to bequeath at death". 41 III, 11| practice of giving metaphorical life to lifeless things: all 42 III, 14| his family or his way of life or something or other of


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