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Alphabetical [« »] crested 1 crete 1 crew 1 crime 19 crimes 7 crimes-thus 1 criminal 8 | Frequency [« »] 20 want 19 actually 19 aim 19 crime 19 deeds 19 down 19 easy | Aristotle Rethoric IntraText - Concordances crime |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 12| also trust to hide your crime by the way you do it or 2 I, 12| tried and failed; for in crime, as in war, there are men 3 I, 12| make it appear that your crime was due to chance, or to 4 I, 13| passions the motives for crime and the state of mind of 5 I, 14| in the less: there is no crime that a man who has stolen 6 I, 14| difficult and even hopeless crime to defend; or the sufferer 7 I, 14| himself. Again, a man’s crime is worse if he has been 8 I, 14| the same way: or if his crime has led to the thinking-out 9 I, 14| prison was built: or if a crime is specially brutal, or 10 I, 14| between states-here the crime is worse because it consists 11 I, 14| many crimes; and that the crime was committed in the very 12 I, 14| a man who will commit a crime in a law-court would commit 13 I, 14| argued otherwise, that the crime is worse which breaks the 14 I, 15| perjury, since perjury is a crime, and a crime must be a voluntary 15 I, 15| perjury is a crime, and a crime must be a voluntary action, 16 II, 23| none to loathe thy mother’s crime?~to which question Alcmaeon 17 II, 23| than you are to commit the crime in question. Otherwise you 18 III, 2 | purveyors". We can thus call a crime a mistake, or a mistake 19 III, 2 | mistake, or a mistake a crime. We can say that a thief "