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Alphabetical [« »] thratt 1 thratteis 1 threatens 2 three 39 threw 1 throat 2 throng 1 | Frequency [« »] 39 past 39 praise 39 question 39 three 38 doing 38 example 38 happen | Aristotle Rethoric IntraText - Concordances three |
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1 I, 2 | the spoken word there are three kinds. The first kind depends 2 I, 2 | There are, then, these three means of effecting persuasion. 3 I, 3 | 3~Rhetoric falls into three divisions, determined by 4 I, 3 | divisions, determined by the three classes of listeners to 5 I, 3 | to speeches. For of the three elements in speech-making— 6 I, 3 | it follows that there are three divisions of oratory- (1) 7 I, 3 | censures somebody. These three kinds of rhetoric refer 8 I, 3 | kinds of rhetoric refer to three different kinds of time. 9 I, 3 | the future.~Rhetoric has three distinct ends in view, one 10 I, 3 | view, one for each of its three kinds. The political orator 11 I, 3 | reference to this one.~That the three kinds of rhetoric do aim 12 I, 3 | aim respectively at the three ends we have mentioned is 13 I, 3 | been said that it is these three subjects, more than any 14 I, 6 | productive of other things in three senses: first as being healthy 15 I, 7 | accompanied by another in three ways, either simultaneously, 16 I, 10| used therein. There are three things we must ascertain 17 I, 14| cheated the temple-builders of three consecrated half-obols. 18 I, 14| that a man who has stolen three consecrated half-obols would 19 II, 1 | are built, in each of the three kinds of oratory, according 20 II, 1 | not think so.~There are three things which inspire confidence 21 II, 1 | orator’s own character-the three, namely, that induce us 22 II, 1 | or more of the following three causes. Men either form 23 II, 1 | who is thought to have all three of these good qualities 24 II, 1 | about each of them under three heads. Take, for instance, 25 II, 1 | points; unless we know all three, we shall be unable to arouse 26 II, 2 | consider unimportant. There are three kinds of slighting-contempt, 27 II, 23| men do wrong from one of three motives, A, B, or C: in 28 II, 23| and this in any of the three following connexions. (1) 29 II, 26| made a false assumption.~Three points must be studied in 30 III, 1 | a speech one must study three points: first, the means 31 III, 1 | have shown that these are three in number; what they are; 32 III, 1 | why there are only these three: for we have shown that 33 III, 1 | subjects. These are the three things-volume of sound, 34 III, 8 | it has in it the ratio of three to two, whereas the other 35 III, 8 | long syllable and ends with three short ones, as~Dalogenes | 36 III, 8 | begins, conversely, with three short syllables and ends 37 III, 10| So we must aim at these three points: Antithesis, Metaphor, 38 III, 12| Nireus likewise from Syme (three well-fashioned ships did 39 III, 16| extent, or even all these three things together. Now the