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Alphabetical [« »] fast 4 fastened 2 fate 1 father 21 fatherland 1 fathers 2 fatuous 1 | Frequency [« »] 21 appropriate 21 choose 21 country 21 father 21 former 21 health 21 however | Aristotle Rethoric IntraText - Concordances father |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 9 | Simonides, ~A woman whose father, whose husband, whose~brethren 2 I, 12| incidentally, be avenging your father or mother, like Zeno), whereas 3 I, 15| red-haired Critias do what~his father commands him.~These witnesses 4 I, 15| quote,~Fool, who slayeth the father and leaveth his sons to 5 II, 2 | the wrath of kings, whose father is Zeus almighty,~and ~Yea, 6 II, 21| enemies—~Fool, who slayeth the father and leaveth his sons to 7 II, 23| that a man who strikes his father also strikes his neighbours 8 II, 23| less likely to strike his father than to strike his neighbours. 9 II, 23| was Ismenias who was the father of her son Thettaliscus, 10 II, 23| gainsay, as the gods, or one’s father, or one’s teachers. Thus 11 II, 23| opinion was the same as his father’s", implying that it would 12 II, 23| for him to contradict his father. Thus too Isocrates argued 13 II, 24| the son should avenge his father. Very good: these two things 14 II, 24| taking Helen, since her father left her free to choose: 15 II, 24| choice, beyond which her father’s authority could not go. 16 III, 2 | as when he is called his "father’s avenger". Simonides, when 17 III, 14| Sophocles—~Polybus was my father...;~and so in Comedy. This, 18 III, 15| replies that Telamon his father was Priam’s enemy, and that 19 III, 16| be replaced,~But since my father and mother in their graves~ 20 III, 17| The latter represents the father himself as attacking his 21 III, 17| makes Haemon appeal to his father on behalf of Antigone as