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| Alphabetical [« »] expressed 2 expresses 2 expressing 1 expression 61 expressions 7 expressly 1 extent 1 | Frequency [« »] 63 say 62 health 62 were 61 expression 61 many 61 predicate 61 rule | Aristotle Topics IntraText - Concordances expression |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 13| how many senses particular expression is used; (3) the discovery 2 I, 15| be abstracted, the same expression ought to remain over. This 3 I, 18| usually distinguish the expression that is proper to the essence 4 II, 4 | being busy": for when the expression is made more familiar, the 5 II, 4 | musician")-therefore if any expression be asserted that is in any 6 II, 6 | established meaning: e.g. the expression "strong at heart" will suggest 7 II, 6 | strong; just as also the expression "of a good hope" may be 8 II, 7 | another, unless the one be an expression denoting an excess, and 9 II, 7 | excess, and the other an expression denoting a defect: for an 10 III, 1 | however, a different turn of expression. For we desire justice in 11 III, 2 | necessities of life. The expression "superfluity" applies whenever 12 III, 5 | slight alteration of the expression, e.g. that what by nature 13 IV, 3 | as genus a metaphorical expression, describing (e.g. "temperance" 14 IV, 4 | to" but "than": for the expression is "other than" so and so.~ 15 V, 2 | sense, or whether the whole expression too signifies more than 16 V, 2 | term you use, or the whole expression signifying the property, 17 V, 2 | meaning is this, that an expression bearing more than one meaning 18 V, 2 | of the various senses the expression bears: and this will not 19 V, 2 | all the terms and also the expression as a whole avoid bearing 20 V, 2 | space’, nor yet the whole expression made by putting them together, 21 V, 2 | further addition beside the expression which shows the essence, 22 V, 2 | should be rendered beside the expression that constitutes the property 23 V, 3 | describing the property an expression of that kind, viz. "to move 24 V, 5 | naturally belongs, but his expression actually indicates one that 25 VI, 1 | true at all to apply the expression as well to that to which 26 VI, 1 | defined): or (3) that the expression is not peculiar to the object ( 27 VI, 1 | incorrectly.~Whether, then, the expression be not also true of that 28 VI, 1 | appropriate genus, or if the expression be not peculiar to the object, 29 VI, 1 | known); (secondly, if the expression used be longer than is necessary: 30 VI, 2 | against each: for if the expression used be not adequate to 31 VI, 2 | has used a metaphorical expression, as, for instance, if he 32 VI, 2 | harmony". For a metaphorical expression is always obscure. It is 33 VI, 2 | the user of a metaphorical expression as though he had used it 34 VI, 2 | that he has used an unclear expression, and one that is worse than 35 VI, 2 | any sort of metaphorical expression.~Moreover, see if from the 36 VI, 2 | Moreover, see if from the expression used the definition of the 37 VI, 3 | struck out the rest of the expression too is peculiar and makes 38 VI, 3 | strike it out, and still the expression is peculiar and makes clear 39 VI, 3 | defined it. Or perhaps the expression used, though appropriate, 40 VI, 3 | if the remainder of the expression be peculiar, the whole too 41 VI, 3 | Whereas if any part of the expression do not apply to everything 42 VI, 3 | it is impossible that the expression as a whole should be peculiar: 43 VI, 3 | animal six feet high": for an expression of that kind is not predicated 44 VI, 4 | be necessary to frame the expression through terms that are intelligible 45 VI, 4 | happens to have framed his expression neither from what is absolutely 46 VI, 5 | the failure to frame the expression by means of terms that are 47 VI, 5 | does not stand first in the expression, e.g. the definition of " 48 VI, 5 | subordinate genus by an expression instead of by name. On the 49 VI, 7 | same. Again, see if the one expression applies alike to both the 50 VI, 9 | whether he has defined by the expression "a privation" a term that 51 VI, 13| Thus e.g. supposing the expression to mean that they exist 52 VII, 2 | signified by the term and by the expression be not the same, clearly 53 VII, 2 | not the same, clearly the expression rendered could not be a 54 VII, 2 | sameness of content between the expression and the term, in order to 55 VII, 3 | For if a definition is an expression signifying the essence of 56 VII, 3 | predicated in that category, the expression containing so and so would 57 VII, 3 | rightly rendered, clearly the expression given must be the right 58 VII, 5 | for a definition is an expression indicating the essence of 59 VII, 5 | predicated of things of which the expression is not predicated. Moreover, 60 VIII, 7 | sense": for if a term or expression covers more than one thing, 61 VIII, 13| terms, or a term and an expression, that mean the same thing.