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Alphabetical [« »] may 258 me 21 mean 58 meaning 21 meanings 1 meanness 7 means 72 | Frequency [« »] 21 however 21 look 21 me 21 meaning 21 oath 21 points 21 public | Aristotle Rethoric IntraText - Concordances meaning |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 2 | forward a "complete proof", meaning that the matter has now 2 I, 2 | word "perhas" has the same meaning (of "end" or "boundary") 3 I, 5 | children" bear a quite clear meaning. Applied to a community, 4 II, 2 | alien honoured by none,~meaning that this is why he is angry. 5 II, 23| and get at its essential meaning, and then use the result 6 II, 23| Well, anyhow, our friend", meaning Socrates, "never spoke like 7 II, 24| esteem" also having the meaning of "worth speech".~2. Another 8 II, 25| true: this is, indeed, the meaning of "giving a verdict in 9 III, 2 | fails to convey a plain meaning will fail to do just what 10 III, 2 | prose. Words of ambiguous meaning are chiefly useful to enable 11 III, 2 | mean words whose ordinary meaning is the same, e.g. "porheueseai" ( 12 III, 2 | words and have the same meaning.~In the Art of Poetry, as 13 III, 2 | worse. To illustrate my meaning: since opposites are in 14 III, 2 | their sound or in their meaning. Further, there is a third 15 III, 2 | you put a given thing your meaning is the same. This is untrue. 16 III, 5 | you do not first make your meaning clear; for instance, if 17 III, 9 | the hearer may take the meaning to be the reverse of what 18 III, 10| then, that, so far as the meaning of what is said is concerned, 19 III, 11| epigrammatic remarks is due to the meaning not being just what the 20 III, 11| letters of a word consist in meaning, not just what you say, 21 III, 11| uses the word with a new meaning. So too with the former