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Alphabetical [« »] placed 2 places 4 plaguelet 1 plain 29 plainly 8 plains 1 planned 1 | Frequency [« »] 29 important 29 my 29 person 29 plain 29 sake 29 shame 29 thought | Aristotle Rethoric IntraText - Concordances plain |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | health. Furthermore, it is plain that it is the function 2 I, 2 | example and enthymeme is made plain by the passages in the Topics 3 I, 2 | enthymeme in rhetoric. It is plain also that each of these 4 I, 3 | relatively; and therefore it is plain that we must also have at 5 I, 6 | 6~It is now plain what our aims, future or 6 I, 7 | consequences. Now it is plain, from all that has been 7 I, 10| wrong to others. For it is plain that the prosecutor must 8 I, 13| definition of equity it is plain what sort of actions, and 9 II, 2 | his request.~It will be plain by now, from what has been 10 II, 2 | specially pleasant. Hence it is plain what seasons, times, conditions, 11 II, 2 | this will happen; and it is plain that the more we are under 12 II, 3 | is a voluntary act, it is plain that we feel calm towards 13 II, 3 | with individuals. This is plain from the definition. Hence 14 II, 3 | senseless clay.~It is now plain that when you wish to calm 15 II, 4 | we wish to be, if it is plain that they wish to be our 16 II, 4 | them cease to exist.~It is plain from all this that we can 17 II, 5 | something to us; for it is plain that they have the will 18 II, 5 | possession of power; for it is plain that, when outraged, it 19 II, 6 | as ourselves: for it is plain that their opinions about 20 II, 9 | good fortune. It is, then, plain to begin with that there 21 II, 9 | deserve.~From all this it is plain what sort of men those are 22 III, 1 | tragedies themselves. It is plain that delivery has just as 23 III, 1 | have dropped; and it is now plain that we have not to treat 24 III, 2 | which fails to convey a plain meaning will fail to do 25 III, 3 | verbosity-for when the sense is plain, you only obscure and spoil 26 III, 10| obvious" to mean what is plain to everybody and needs no 27 III, 14| they began to nod". It is plain that such introductions 28 III, 16| much as will make the facts plain, or will lead the hearer 29 III, 19| to be judged may be quite plain; in the epilogue you should