Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] judged 6 judgement 12 judgements 5 judges 32 judging 3 juror 1 jury 1 | Frequency [« »] 32 between 32 happened 32 itself 32 judges 32 metaphor 32 purpose 32 really | Aristotle Rethoric IntraText - Concordances judges |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | be to the decision of the judges; and this for several reasons. 2 I, 1 | be decided, so that the judges, intent on their own satisfaction 3 I, 1 | that if the decisions of judges are not what they ought 4 I, 7 | or, again, by authorized judges or those whom they select 5 I, 11| people whom he thinks good judges. His neighbours are better 6 I, 11| His neighbours are better judges than people at a distance; 7 I, 11| the more likely to be good judges of him. Honour and credit 8 I, 12| their victims or with the judges who try them. Their victims 9 I, 12| prosecuting; while their judges will favour them because 10 I, 12| postponed, or corrupt your judges: or that even if you are 11 I, 12| too much frightened of the judges to make up their minds to 12 I, 15| and must be assayed by the judges, if the genuine is to be 13 I, 15| opinion" not meant to make the judges give a verdict that is contrary 14 I, 15| you will argue that the judges must decide from what is 15 I, 15| against the interest of the judges or not; and so on-these 16 I, 15| quote cases, familiar to the judges, in which this sort of thing 17 I, 15| does not, you think the judges will decide against him; 18 I, 15| able, since you trust the judges and do not trust him.~If 19 I, 15| where you demand that the judges should do so before giving 20 I, 15| ought not to want other judges than himself, since you 21 I, 15| opponents insist that you, the judges, must abide by the oath 22 II, 9 | therefore our speech puts the judges in such a frame of mind 23 II, 9 | will be impossible for the judges to feel pity.~ 24 II, 18| together are treated as the judges of it. Broadly speaking, 25 II, 22| defined-those accepted by our judges or by those whose authority 26 II, 22| most, if not all, of our judges that the opinions put forward 27 II, 23| was killed at Thebes, the judges were requested to decide 28 II, 23| thus decided, or the actual judges of the present question, 29 II, 25| necessary truth. But the judges think, if the refutation 30 III, 1 | working on the emotions of the judges themselves, (2) by giving 31 III, 14| at the close, so that the judges may more easily remember 32 III, 16| in anything else that the judges will enjoy.~The defendant