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Alphabetical [« »] conceived 1 concentration 1 conception 1 concerned 29 concerned-his 1 concerning 2 concerns 6 | Frequency [« »] 30 usually 30 yourself 29 beginning 29 concerned 29 contrary 29 goodness 29 important | Aristotle Rethoric IntraText - Concordances concerned |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | Dialectic. Both alike are concerned with such things as come, 2 I, 1 | in its strict sense, is concerned with the modes of persuasion. 3 I, 2 | technical character, it is not concerned with any special or definite 4 I, 2 | the theory of rhetoric is concerned not with what seems probable 5 I, 2 | universal Lines of Argument are concerned, that is to say those lines 6 I, 2 | instance, the line of argument concerned with "the more or less". 7 I, 3 | The political orator is concerned with the future: it is about 8 I, 3 | party in a case at law is concerned with the past; one man accuses 9 I, 3 | orator is, properly speaking, concerned with the present, since 10 I, 4 | made with the countries concerned. There are, indeed, two 11 I, 5 | things or not to do them is concerned with happiness and with 12 I, 9 | where physical pleasures are concerned; incontinence is the opposite. 13 I, 12| consumed like eatables are concerned, or things that can easily 14 I, 15| So far as the laws are concerned, the above discussion is 15 I, 15| him.~These witnesses are concerned with past events. As to 16 II, 2 | superior: as where money is concerned a wealthy man looks for 17 II, 2 | poor man; where speaking is concerned, the man with a turn for 18 II, 4 | or our personal safety is concerned: and therefore we value 19 II, 4 | character. Anger is always concerned with individuals-a Callias 20 II, 9 | so far as that thing is concerned. Hence servile, worthless, 21 II, 18| lines of argument, that concerned with Amplification is-as 22 II, 18| ceremonial speeches; that concerned with the Past, to forensic 23 II, 18| always about the past; that concerned with Possibility and the 24 III, 1 | business of rhetoric being concerned with appearances, we must 25 III, 10| meaning of what is said is concerned, make an argument acceptable. 26 III, 10| So far as the style is concerned, it is the antithetical 27 III, 14| type of speech. They are concerned with the speaker, the hearer, 28 III, 14| speaker’s opponent. Those concerned with the speaker himself 29 III, 16| depict character, being concerned with moral questions. This