IntraText Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library |
Alphabetical [« »] know 16 knowing 2 knowledge 56 known 32 knows 2 kofon 1 koinai 1 | Frequency [« »] 32 argument 32 baiter 32 idem 32 known 32 last 32 think 32 ton | Marcus Tullius Cicero Academica Concordances known |
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1 Pre | some others of the less known and less edited portions 2 Int, I| of Carneades whom he had known18. Phaedrus was now at Athens, 3 Int, I| he does not seem to have known either personally. ~From 4 Int, IV| Finibus, to have become known to a tolerably large circle 5 Int, IV| incongruity between the known attainments of Catulus and 6 Int, IV| Quintilian seems to have known the first edition very well206, 7 Int, IV| Lucullus227. It is well known that in the arrangement 8 Int, IV| imitated238, and was well known as a wit and writer of epigrams239.~ 9 Int, IV| Philo were probably not known to Catulus248.~I now proceed 10 Int, IV| attainments, are too well known to need mention here. He 11 Int, IV| Antiochus286. Nearly all that is known of the learning of Lucullus 12 Not, 1| to fit it all in with the known opinions of old Academics 13 Not, 1| Crates and Crantor little is known. Polemonem ... Zeno et Arcesilas: 14 Not, 1| of the cardinal and best known doctrines of Stoicism, as 15 Not, 1| passages which were well known to Cic. and had taken great 16 Not, 2| Heraclitus Tyrius: scarcely known except from this passage. 17 Not, 2| Agnon and Hagnon being known, if known at all, from these 18 Not, 2| and Hagnon being known, if known at all, from these two passages 19 Not, 2| between the unknown and the known. Eo, quo minime volt: several 20 Not, 2| 28. Perceptum: thoroughly known and grasped. Similar arguments 21 Not, 2| absurd, a thing cannot be known at all unless by such marks 22 Not, 2| by which a thing may be known. Their "probability" then 23 Not, 2| used to mean "a certainly known sensation."]~§40. Quasi 24 Not, 2| which can be perceived (known with certainty) and those 25 Not, 2| capable of being thoroughly known and distinguished from others ( 26 Not, 2| the definition is firmly known, the thing, which is more 27 Not, 2| important, must also be known. In illa vera we have a 28 Not, 2| based on the assumption known to be Stoic, omnia deum 29 Not, 2| of things perceived and known." The dogmatist theory of 30 Not, 2| at discord with what is known of the tenets of the later 31 Not, 2| hold that nothing can be known about them! (123) Who knows 32 Not, 2| thing could be more or less known than another. Nunc lucere: