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Alphabetical [« »] say 85 saying 28 sayings 5 says 35 scale 3 scantier 1 scarcity 1 | Frequency [« »] 35 future 35 part 35 persuasion 35 says 35 shall 35 state 35 various | Aristotle Rethoric IntraText - Concordances says |
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1 I, 2 | achieved by what the speaker says, not by what people think 2 I, 7 | than before. Hence Homer says that Meleager was roused 3 I, 11| believe the poet when he says~He spake, and in each man’ 4 I, 11| settled condition: therefore, says the poet,~Change is in all 5 I, 11| do best; just as the poet says,~To that he bends himself,~ 6 I, 12| cares for; as the proverb says, "wickedness needs but a 7 I, 13| Antigone clearly means when she says that the burial of Polyneices 8 I, 13| kill no living creature, says that doing this is not just 9 I, 13| immensity.~And as Alcidamas says in his Messeniac Oration.... ~ 10 II, 2 | paid to it. So Achilles says in anger:~He hath taken 11 II, 23| question Alcmaeon in reply says, ~Why, there are two things 12 II, 23| others; and Evagoras also, says Isocrates, was good, since 13 II, 23| opponent’s conduct, e.g. "He says he is devoted to you, yet 14 II, 23| our own conduct, e.g. "He says I am litigious, and yet 15 II, 23| Sophocles, for~instance, says, ~O steel in heart as thou 16 II, 23| And, in Euripides, Hecuba says of Aphrodite,~Her name and 17 II, 24| instance is what Polycrates says of the mice, that they " 18 II, 24| universally probable: as Agathon says,~One might perchance say 19 III, 2 | words may, as Licymnius says, lie in their sound or in 20 III, 3 | witlessness of nature", and says "whetted with the unmitigated 21 III, 3 | green and full of sap", and says "foul was the deed you sowed 22 III, 4 | but slight. When the poet says of Achilles that he~Leapt 23 III, 4 | this is a simile; when he says of him "the lion leapt", 24 III, 5 | to be right if he simply says that a thing will happen 25 III, 5 | thing will happen than if he says when it will happen, and 26 III, 5 | outset of his treatise he says, "Though this truth is always 27 III, 11| Either way, the speaker says something unexpected, the 28 III, 11| Carpathus and his hare", says he. For both alike went 29 III, 12| memory, though he nowhere says a word about him afterwards.~ 30 III, 14| described. The poet finely says May I find in Phaeacian 31 III, 14| it is true, as Socrates says in the Funeral Speech, that " 32 III, 15| him, or not as much as he says; or that you have done him 33 III, 15| thus in the Teucer Odysseus says that Teucer is closely bound 34 III, 16| Antigone, where Antigone says she had cared more for her 35 III, 17| would have spoken. ,as much’ says Homer, not "as well". Nor