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Alphabetical    [«  »]
slays 1
sleep 1
slew 1
slight 21
slighted 2
slighting 10
slighting-contempt 1
Frequency    [«  »]
21 points
21 public
21 rather
21 slight
21 subjects
21 truth
21 unjust
Aristotle
Rethoric

IntraText - Concordances

slight

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 6| either imperceptible or slight. Good, too, are things that 2 II, 2| revenge for a conspicuous slight directed without justification 3 II, 2| just such things that you slight. (2) Spite is another kind; 4 II, 2| prevent his getting it. The slight arises just from the fact 5 II, 2| due to them; you certainly slight them thus; for it is the 6 II, 2| especially against those who slight their present distress. 7 II, 2| throughout, any other sort of slight being enough if special 8 II, 2| account at all, if they slight us. For, by our hypothesis, 9 II, 2| the anger caused by the slight is felt towards people who 10 II, 2| Further, with those who slight us before five classes of 11 II, 2| feel angry with those who slight us in connexion with what 12 II, 2| return a favour, since such a slight is unjustifiable. Also with 13 II, 2| and to neglect us is to slight us.~The persons with whom 14 II, 3| get angry with those who slight us; and since slighting 15 II, 3| no one can be supposed to slight himself. Also towards those 16 II, 3| are shameless towards us slight us and show contempt for 17 II, 3| feel fear, and nobody can slight any one so long as he feels 18 II, 3| not insult or mock at or slight any one at all, or not any 19 II, 3| have done it from a wish to slight us, for no one slights people 20 III, 1| the stage. But only very slight attempts to deal with them 21 III, 4| metaphor; the difference is but slight. When the poet says of Achilles


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