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Alphabetical [« »] further-good 1 furthermore 2 fury 4 future 35 g 1 gain 17 gained 5 | Frequency [« »] 36 under 35 argue 35 come 35 future 35 part 35 persuasion 35 says | Aristotle Rethoric IntraText - Concordances future |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 2 | and cannot now or in the future be, other than they are, 2 I, 3 | make about things past or future, or an observer. A member 3 I, 3 | the assembly decides about future events, a juryman about 4 I, 3 | orator is concerned with the future: it is about things to be 5 I, 3 | and to make guesses at the future.~Rhetoric has three distinct 6 I, 5 | the man who can do good in future. Doing good refers either 7 I, 6 | now plain what our aims, future or actual, should be in 8 I, 9 | speeches; for we judge of future events by divination from 9 I, 11| past and remembered, or future and expected, since we perceive 10 I, 11| remember past ones, and expect future ones. Now the things that 11 I, 11| or the expectation of a future one, just as persons down 12 I, 12| exposed to attack in the future: they will be too much frightened 13 I, 15| with past events. As to future events we shall also appeal 14 II, 5 | destructive or painful evil in the future. Of destructive or painful 15 II, 5 | grown callous about the future, like men who are being 16 II, 6 | whether present, past, or future, which seem likely to involve 17 II, 6 | for our present, past, or future circumstances, it follows 18 II, 8 | emotions take no account of the future), nor by a disposition to 19 II, 8 | expecting them to happen in the future.~So much for the mental 20 II, 12| expectation refers to the future, memory to the past, and 21 II, 12| past, and youth has a long future before it and a short past 22 II, 13| They lack confidence in the future; partly through experience-for 23 II, 13| past; and hope is of the future, memory of the past. This, 24 II, 18| happened, or will happen in future. Again, the topic of Size 25 II, 18| with Possibility and the Future, to political speeches.~ 26 II, 19| mentioned.~How questions of Future Fact should be argued is 27 II, 19| the reverse, of past or future fact, and of the relative 28 II, 20| since in most respects the future will be like what the past 29 II, 21| us treat our friends as future enemies: much better to 30 II, 21| to treat our enemies as future friends." The moral purpose 31 III, 10| a peace as this apply to future action. So is such a saying 32 III, 16| make better plans for the future. Or it may be employed to 33 III, 17| Political oratory deals with future events, of which it can 34 III, 17| since it deals with the future, whereas the pleader deals 35 III, 17| practise divination about the future; only about the obscurities