title
stringlengths 6
55
| author
stringlengths 4
15
| school
stringclasses 18
values | sentence_spacy
stringlengths 20
2.65k
| sentence_str
stringlengths 20
2.65k
| original_publication_date
int64 -350
1.99k
| corpus_edition_date
int64 1.65k
2.02k
| sentence_length
int64 20
2.65k
| sentence_lowered
stringlengths 20
2.65k
⌀ | tokenized_txt
stringlengths 2
3.76k
| lemmatized_str
stringlengths 17
2.67k
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | for perhaps you might accept that assessment. | for perhaps you might accept that assessment. | -350 | 1,997 | 45 | for perhaps you might accept that assessment. | ['for', 'perhaps', 'you', 'might', 'accept', 'that', 'assessment'] | for perhaps -PRON- may accept that assessment . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I should have to be inordinately fond of life, men of Athens, to be so unreasonable as to suppose that other men will easily tolerate my company and conversation when you, my fellow citizens, have been unable to endure them, but found them a burden and resented them so that you are now seeking to get rid of them. | I should have to be inordinately fond of life, men of Athens, to be so unreasonable as to suppose that other men will easily tolerate my company and conversation when you, my fellow citizens, have been unable to endure them, but found them a burden and resented them so that you are now seeking to get rid of them. | -350 | 1,997 | 314 | i should have to be inordinately fond of life, men of athens, to be so unreasonable as to suppose that other men will easily tolerate my company and conversation when you, my fellow citizens, have been unable to endure them, but found them a burden and resented them so that you are now seeking to get rid of them. | ['should', 'have', 'to', 'be', 'inordinately', 'fond', 'of', 'life', 'men', 'of', 'athens', 'to', 'be', 'so', 'unreasonable', 'as', 'to', 'suppose', 'that', 'other', 'men', 'will', 'easily', 'tolerate', 'my', 'company', 'and', 'conversation', 'when', 'you', 'my', 'fellow', 'citizens', 'have', 'been', 'unable', 'to', 'endure', 'them', 'but', 'found', 'them', 'burden', 'and', 'resented', 'them', 'so', 'that', 'you', 'are', 'now', 'seeking', 'to', 'get', 'rid', 'of', 'them'] | -PRON- should have to be inordinately fond of life , man of Athens , to be so unreasonable as to suppose that other man will easily tolerate -PRON- company and conversation when -PRON- , -PRON- fellow citizen , have be unable to endure -PRON- , but find -PRON- a burden and resent -PRON- so that -PRON- be now seek to get rid of -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Far from it, gentlemen. | Far from it, gentlemen. | -350 | 1,997 | 23 | far from it, gentlemen. | ['far', 'from', 'it', 'gentlemen'] | far from -PRON- , gentleman . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | It would be a fine life at my age to be driven out of one city after another, for I know very well that wherever I go the young men will listen to my talk as they do here. | It would be a fine life at my age to be driven out of one city after another, for I know very well that wherever I go the young men will listen to my talk as they do here. | -350 | 1,997 | 171 | it would be a fine life at my age to be driven out of one city after another, for i know very well that wherever i go the young men will listen to my talk as they do here. | ['it', 'would', 'be', 'fine', 'life', 'at', 'my', 'age', 'to', 'be', 'driven', 'out', 'of', 'one', 'city', 'after', 'another', 'for', 'know', 'very', 'well', 'that', 'wherever', 'go', 'the', 'young', 'men', 'will', 'listen', 'to', 'my', 'talk', 'as', 'they', 'do', 'here'] | -PRON- would be a fine life at -PRON- age to be drive out of one city after another , for -PRON- know very well that wherever -PRON- go the young man will listen to -PRON- talk as -PRON- do here . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | If I drive them away, they will themselves persuade their elders to drive me out; if I do not drive them away, their fathers and relations will drive me out on their behalf. | If I drive them away, they will themselves persuade their elders to drive me out; if I do not drive them away, their fathers and relations will drive me out on their behalf. | -350 | 1,997 | 173 | if i drive them away, they will themselves persuade their elders to drive me out; if i do not drive them away, their fathers and relations will drive me out on their behalf. | ['if', 'drive', 'them', 'away', 'they', 'will', 'themselves', 'persuade', 'their', 'elders', 'to', 'drive', 'me', 'out', 'if', 'do', 'not', 'drive', 'them', 'away', 'their', 'fathers', 'and', 'relations', 'will', 'drive', 'me', 'out', 'on', 'their', 'behalf'] | if -PRON- drive -PRON- away , -PRON- will -PRON- persuade -PRON- elder to drive -PRON- out ; if -PRON- do not drive -PRON- away , -PRON- father and relation will drive -PRON- out on -PRON- behalf . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Perhaps someone might say: But Socrates, if you leave us will you not be able to live quietly, without talking? | Perhaps someone might say: But Socrates, if you leave us will you not be able to live quietly, without talking? | -350 | 1,997 | 111 | perhaps someone might say: but socrates, if you leave us will you not be able to live quietly, without talking? | ['perhaps', 'someone', 'might', 'say', 'but', 'socrates', 'if', 'you', 'leave', 'us', 'will', 'you', 'not', 'be', 'able', 'to', 'live', 'quietly', 'without', 'talking'] | perhaps someone may say : but Socrates , if -PRON- leave -PRON- will -PRON- not be able to live quietly , without talk ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Now this is the most difficult point on which to convince some of you. | Now this is the most difficult point on which to convince some of you. | -350 | 1,997 | 70 | now this is the most difficult point on which to convince some of you. | ['now', 'this', 'is', 'the', 'most', 'difficult', 'point', 'on', 'which', 'to', 'convince', 'some', 'of', 'you'] | now this be the most difficult point on which to convince some of -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | If I say that it is impossible for me to keep quiet because that means disobeying the god, you will not believe me and will think I am being ironical. | If I say that it is impossible for me to keep quiet because that means disobeying the god, you will not believe me and will think I am being ironical. | -350 | 1,997 | 150 | if i say that it is impossible for me to keep quiet because that means disobeying the god, you will not believe me and will think i am being ironical. | ['if', 'say', 'that', 'it', 'is', 'impossible', 'for', 'me', 'to', 'keep', 'quiet', 'because', 'that', 'means', 'disobeying', 'the', 'god', 'you', 'will', 'not', 'believe', 'me', 'and', 'will', 'think', 'am', 'being', 'ironical'] | if -PRON- say that -PRON- be impossible for -PRON- to keep quiet because that mean disobey the god , -PRON- will not believe -PRON- and will think -PRON- be be ironical . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | On the other hand, if I say that it is the greatest good for a man to discuss virtue every day and those other things about which you hear me conversing and testing myself and others, for the unexamined life is not worth living for men, you will believe me even less. | On the other hand, if I say that it is the greatest good for a man to discuss virtue every day and those other things about which you hear me conversing and testing myself and others, for the unexamined life is not worth living for men, you will believe me even less. | -350 | 1,997 | 267 | on the other hand, if i say that it is the greatest good for a man to discuss virtue every day and those other things about which you hear me conversing and testing myself and others, for the unexamined life is not worth living for men, you will believe me even less. | ['on', 'the', 'other', 'hand', 'if', 'say', 'that', 'it', 'is', 'the', 'greatest', 'good', 'for', 'man', 'to', 'discuss', 'virtue', 'every', 'day', 'and', 'those', 'other', 'things', 'about', 'which', 'you', 'hear', 'me', 'conversing', 'and', 'testing', 'myself', 'and', 'others', 'for', 'the', 'unexamined', 'life', 'is', 'not', 'worth', 'living', 'for', 'men', 'you', 'will', 'believe', 'me', 'even', 'less'] | on the other hand , if -PRON- say that -PRON- be the great good for a man to discuss virtue every day and those other thing about which -PRON- hear -PRON- converse and test -PRON- and other , for the unexamined life be not worth live for man , -PRON- will believe -PRON- even less . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | What I say is true, gentlemen, but it is not easy to convince you. | What I say is true, gentlemen, but it is not easy to convince you. | -350 | 1,997 | 66 | what i say is true, gentlemen, but it is not easy to convince you. | ['what', 'say', 'is', 'true', 'gentlemen', 'but', 'it', 'is', 'not', 'easy', 'to', 'convince', 'you'] | what -PRON- say be true , gentleman , but -PRON- be not easy to convince -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | At the same time, I am not accustomed to think that I deserve any penalty. | At the same time, I am not accustomed to think that I deserve any penalty. | -350 | 1,997 | 74 | at the same time, i am not accustomed to think that i deserve any penalty. | ['at', 'the', 'same', 'time', 'am', 'not', 'accustomed', 'to', 'think', 'that', 'deserve', 'any', 'penalty'] | at the same time , -PRON- be not accustomed to think that -PRON- deserve any penalty . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | If I had money, I would assess the penalty at the amount I could pay, for that would not hurt me, but I have none, unless you are willing to set the penalty at the amount I can pay, and perhaps I could pay you one mina of silver. | If I had money, I would assess the penalty at the amount I could pay, for that would not hurt me, but I have none, unless you are willing to set the penalty at the amount I can pay, and perhaps I could pay you one mina of silver. | -350 | 1,997 | 229 | if i had money, i would assess the penalty at the amount i could pay, for that would not hurt me, but i have none, unless you are willing to set the penalty at the amount i can pay, and perhaps i could pay you one mina of silver. | ['if', 'had', 'money', 'would', 'assess', 'the', 'penalty', 'at', 'the', 'amount', 'could', 'pay', 'for', 'that', 'would', 'not', 'hurt', 'me', 'but', 'have', 'none', 'unless', 'you', 'are', 'willing', 'to', 'set', 'the', 'penalty', 'at', 'the', 'amount', 'can', 'pay', 'and', 'perhaps', 'could', 'pay', 'you', 'one', 'mina', 'of', 'silver'] | if -PRON- have money , -PRON- would assess the penalty at the amount -PRON- could pay , for that would not hurt -PRON- , but -PRON- have none , unless -PRON- be willing to set the penalty at the amount -PRON- can pay , and perhaps -PRON- could pay -PRON- one mina of silver . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | So that is my assessment. | So that is my assessment. | -350 | 1,997 | 25 | so that is my assessment. | ['so', 'that', 'is', 'my', 'assessment'] | so that be -PRON- assessment . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | One mina was the equivalent of drachmas. | One mina was the equivalent of drachmas. | -350 | 1,997 | 40 | one mina was the equivalent of drachmas. | ['one', 'mina', 'was', 'the', 'equivalent', 'of', 'drachmas'] | one mina be the equivalent of drachma . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | In the late fifth century one drachma was the standard daily wage of a laborer. | In the late fifth century one drachma was the standard daily wage of a laborer. | -350 | 1,997 | 79 | in the late fifth century one drachma was the standard daily wage of a laborer. | ['in', 'the', 'late', 'fifth', 'century', 'one', 'drachma', 'was', 'the', 'standard', 'daily', 'wage', 'of', 'laborer'] | in the late fifth century one drachma be the standard daily wage of a laborer . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | A mina, then, was a considerable sum. | A mina, then, was a considerable sum. | -350 | 1,997 | 37 | a mina, then, was a considerable sum. | ['mina', 'then', 'was', 'considerable', 'sum'] | a mina , then , be a considerable sum . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Plato here, men of Athens, and Crito and Critobulus and Apollodorus bid me put the penalty at thirty minas, and they will stand surety for the money. | Plato here, men of Athens, and Crito and Critobulus and Apollodorus bid me put the penalty at thirty minas, and they will stand surety for the money. | -350 | 1,997 | 149 | plato here, men of athens, and crito and critobulus and apollodorus bid me put the penalty at thirty minas, and they will stand surety for the money. | ['plato', 'here', 'men', 'of', 'athens', 'and', 'crito', 'and', 'critobulus', 'and', 'apollodorus', 'bid', 'me', 'put', 'the', 'penalty', 'at', 'thirty', 'minas', 'and', 'they', 'will', 'stand', 'surety', 'for', 'the', 'money'] | Plato here , man of Athens , and Crito and Critobulus and Apollodorus bid -PRON- put the penalty at thirty mina , and -PRON- will stand surety for the money . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Well then, that is my assessment, and they will be sufficient guarantee of payment. | Well then, that is my assessment, and they will be sufficient guarantee of payment. | -350 | 1,997 | 83 | well then, that is my assessment, and they will be sufficient guarantee of payment. | ['well', 'then', 'that', 'is', 'my', 'assessment', 'and', 'they', 'will', 'be', 'sufficient', 'guarantee', 'of', 'payment'] | well then , that be -PRON- assessment , and -PRON- will be sufficient guarantee of payment . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | The jury now votes again and sentences Socrates to death. | The jury now votes again and sentences Socrates to death. | -350 | 1,997 | 57 | the jury now votes again and sentences socrates to death. | ['the', 'jury', 'now', 'votes', 'again', 'and', 'sentences', 'socrates', 'to', 'death'] | the jury now vote again and sentence Socrates to death . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | It is for the sake of a short time, men of Athens, that you will acquire the reputation and the guilt, in the eyes of those who want to denigrate the city, of having killed Socrates, a wise man, for they who want to revile you will say that I am wise even if I am not. | It is for the sake of a short time, men of Athens, that you will acquire the reputation and the guilt, in the eyes of those who want to denigrate the city, of having killed Socrates, a wise man, for they who want to revile you will say that I am wise even if I am not. | -350 | 1,997 | 268 | it is for the sake of a short time, men of athens, that you will acquire the reputation and the guilt, in the eyes of those who want to denigrate the city, of having killed socrates, a wise man, for they who want to revile you will say that i am wise even if i am not. | ['it', 'is', 'for', 'the', 'sake', 'of', 'short', 'time', 'men', 'of', 'athens', 'that', 'you', 'will', 'acquire', 'the', 'reputation', 'and', 'the', 'guilt', 'in', 'the', 'eyes', 'of', 'those', 'who', 'want', 'to', 'denigrate', 'the', 'city', 'of', 'having', 'killed', 'socrates', 'wise', 'man', 'for', 'they', 'who', 'want', 'to', 'revile', 'you', 'will', 'say', 'that', 'am', 'wise', 'even', 'if', 'am', 'not'] | -PRON- be for the sake of a short time , man of Athens , that -PRON- will acquire the reputation and the guilt , in the eye of those who want to denigrate the city , of have kill Socrates , a wise man , for -PRON- who want to revile -PRON- will say that -PRON- be wise even if -PRON- be not . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | If you had waited but a little while, this would have happened of its own accord. | If you had waited but a little while, this would have happened of its own accord. | -350 | 1,997 | 81 | if you had waited but a little while, this would have happened of its own accord. | ['if', 'you', 'had', 'waited', 'but', 'little', 'while', 'this', 'would', 'have', 'happened', 'of', 'its', 'own', 'accord'] | if -PRON- have wait but a little while , this would have happen of -PRON- own accord . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | You see my age, that I am already advanced in years and close to death. | You see my age, that I am already advanced in years and close to death. | -350 | 1,997 | 71 | you see my age, that i am already advanced in years and close to death. | ['you', 'see', 'my', 'age', 'that', 'am', 'already', 'advanced', 'in', 'years', 'and', 'close', 'to', 'death'] | -PRON- see -PRON- age , that -PRON- be already advance in year and close to death . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I am saying this not to all of you but to those who condemned me to death, and to these same ones | I am saying this not to all of you but to those who condemned me to death, and to these same ones | -350 | 1,997 | 97 | i am saying this not to all of you but to those who condemned me to death, and to these same ones | ['am', 'saying', 'this', 'not', 'to', 'all', 'of', 'you', 'but', 'to', 'those', 'who', 'condemned', 'me', 'to', 'death', 'and', 'to', 'these', 'same', 'ones'] | -PRON- be say this not to all of -PRON- but to those who condemn -PRON- to death , and to these same one |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Perhaps you think that I was convicted for lack of such words as might have convinced you, if I thought I should say or do all I could to avoid my sentence. | Perhaps you think that I was convicted for lack of such words as might have convinced you, if I thought I should say or do all I could to avoid my sentence. | -350 | 1,997 | 156 | perhaps you think that i was convicted for lack of such words as might have convinced you, if i thought i should say or do all i could to avoid my sentence. | ['perhaps', 'you', 'think', 'that', 'was', 'convicted', 'for', 'lack', 'of', 'such', 'words', 'as', 'might', 'have', 'convinced', 'you', 'if', 'thought', 'should', 'say', 'or', 'do', 'all', 'could', 'to', 'avoid', 'my', 'sentence'] | perhaps -PRON- think that -PRON- be convict for lack of such word as may have convince -PRON- , if -PRON- think -PRON- should say or do all -PRON- could to avoid -PRON- sentence . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I was convicted because I lacked not words but boldness and shamelessness and the willingness to say to you what you would most gladly have heard from me, lamentations and tears and my saying and doing many things that I say are unworthy of me but that you are accustomed to hear from others. | I was convicted because I lacked not words but boldness and shamelessness and the willingness to say to you what you would most gladly have heard from me, lamentations and tears and my saying and doing many things that I say are unworthy of me but that you are accustomed to hear from others. | -350 | 1,997 | 292 | i was convicted because i lacked not words but boldness and shamelessness and the willingness to say to you what you would most gladly have heard from me, lamentations and tears and my saying and doing many things that i say are unworthy of me but that you are accustomed to hear from others. | ['was', 'convicted', 'because', 'lacked', 'not', 'words', 'but', 'boldness', 'and', 'shamelessness', 'and', 'the', 'willingness', 'to', 'say', 'to', 'you', 'what', 'you', 'would', 'most', 'gladly', 'have', 'heard', 'from', 'me', 'lamentations', 'and', 'tears', 'and', 'my', 'saying', 'and', 'doing', 'many', 'things', 'that', 'say', 'are', 'unworthy', 'of', 'me', 'but', 'that', 'you', 'are', 'accustomed', 'to', 'hear', 'from', 'others'] | -PRON- be convict because -PRON- lack not word but boldness and shamelessness and the willingness to say to -PRON- what -PRON- would most gladly have hear from -PRON- , lamentation and tear and -PRON- saying and do many thing that -PRON- say be unworthy of -PRON- but that -PRON- be accustomed to hear from other . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I did not think then that the danger I ran should make me do | I did not think then that the danger I ran should make me do | -350 | 1,997 | 60 | i did not think then that the danger i ran should make me do | ['did', 'not', 'think', 'then', 'that', 'the', 'danger', 'ran', 'should', 'make', 'me', 'do'] | -PRON- do not think then that the danger -PRON- run should make -PRON- do |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | anything mean, nor do I now regret the nature of my defense. | anything mean, nor do I now regret the nature of my defense. | -350 | 1,997 | 60 | anything mean, nor do i now regret the nature of my defense. | ['anything', 'mean', 'nor', 'do', 'now', 'regret', 'the', 'nature', 'of', 'my', 'defense'] | anything mean , nor do -PRON- now regret the nature of -PRON- defense . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I would much rather die after this kind of defense than live after making the other kind. | I would much rather die after this kind of defense than live after making the other kind. | -350 | 1,997 | 89 | i would much rather die after this kind of defense than live after making the other kind. | ['would', 'much', 'rather', 'die', 'after', 'this', 'kind', 'of', 'defense', 'than', 'live', 'after', 'making', 'the', 'other', 'kind'] | -PRON- would much rather die after this kind of defense than live after make the other kind . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Neither I nor any other man should, on trial or in war, contrive to avoid death at any cost. | Neither I nor any other man should, on trial or in war, contrive to avoid death at any cost. | -350 | 1,997 | 92 | neither i nor any other man should, on trial or in war, contrive to avoid death at any cost. | ['neither', 'nor', 'any', 'other', 'man', 'should', 'on', 'trial', 'or', 'in', 'war', 'contrive', 'to', 'avoid', 'death', 'at', 'any', 'cost'] | neither -PRON- nor any other man should , on trial or in war , contrive to avoid death at any cost . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Indeed it is often obvious in battle that one could escape death by throwing away one's weapons and by turning to supplicate one's pursuers, and there are many ways to avoid death in every kind of danger if one will venture to do or say anything to avoid it. | Indeed it is often obvious in battle that one could escape death by throwing away one's weapons and by turning to supplicate one's pursuers, and there are many ways to avoid death in every kind of danger if one will venture to do or say anything to avoid it. | -350 | 1,997 | 258 | indeed it is often obvious in battle that one could escape death by throwing away one's weapons and by turning to supplicate one's pursuers, and there are many ways to avoid death in every kind of danger if one will venture to do or say anything to avoid it. | ['indeed', 'it', 'is', 'often', 'obvious', 'in', 'battle', 'that', 'one', 'could', 'escape', 'death', 'by', 'throwing', 'away', 'one', 'weapons', 'and', 'by', 'turning', 'to', 'supplicate', 'one', 'pursuers', 'and', 'there', 'are', 'many', 'ways', 'to', 'avoid', 'death', 'in', 'every', 'kind', 'of', 'danger', 'if', 'one', 'will', 'venture', 'to', 'do', 'or', 'say', 'anything', 'to', 'avoid', 'it'] | indeed -PRON- be often obvious in battle that one could escape death by throw away one 's weapon and by turn to supplicate one 's pursuer , and there be many way to avoid death in every kind of danger if one will venture to do or say anything to avoid -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | It is not difficult to avoid death, gentlemen; it is much more difficult to avoid wickedness, for it runs faster than death. | It is not difficult to avoid death, gentlemen; it is much more difficult to avoid wickedness, for it runs faster than death. | -350 | 1,997 | 124 | it is not difficult to avoid death, gentlemen; it is much more difficult to avoid wickedness, for it runs faster than death. | ['it', 'is', 'not', 'difficult', 'to', 'avoid', 'death', 'gentlemen', 'it', 'is', 'much', 'more', 'difficult', 'to', 'avoid', 'wickedness', 'for', 'it', 'runs', 'faster', 'than', 'death'] | -PRON- be not difficult to avoid death , gentleman ; -PRON- be much more difficult to avoid wickedness , for -PRON- run faster than death . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Slow and elderly as I am, I have been caught by the slower pursuer, whereas my accusers, being clever and sharp, have been caught by the quicker, wickedness. | Slow and elderly as I am, I have been caught by the slower pursuer, whereas my accusers, being clever and sharp, have been caught by the quicker, wickedness. | -350 | 1,997 | 157 | slow and elderly as i am, i have been caught by the slower pursuer, whereas my accusers, being clever and sharp, have been caught by the quicker, wickedness. | ['slow', 'and', 'elderly', 'as', 'am', 'have', 'been', 'caught', 'by', 'the', 'slower', 'pursuer', 'whereas', 'my', 'accusers', 'being', 'clever', 'and', 'sharp', 'have', 'been', 'caught', 'by', 'the', 'quicker', 'wickedness'] | slow and elderly as -PRON- be , -PRON- have be catch by the slow pursuer , whereas -PRON- accuser , be clever and sharp , have be catch by the quick , wickedness . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I leave you now, condemned to death by you, but they are condemned by truth to wickedness and injustice. | I leave you now, condemned to death by you, but they are condemned by truth to wickedness and injustice. | -350 | 1,997 | 104 | i leave you now, condemned to death by you, but they are condemned by truth to wickedness and injustice. | ['leave', 'you', 'now', 'condemned', 'to', 'death', 'by', 'you', 'but', 'they', 'are', 'condemned', 'by', 'truth', 'to', 'wickedness', 'and', 'injustice'] | -PRON- leave -PRON- now , condemn to death by -PRON- , but -PRON- be condemn by truth to wickedness and injustice . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | So I maintain my assessment, and they maintain theirs. | So I maintain my assessment, and they maintain theirs. | -350 | 1,997 | 54 | so i maintain my assessment, and they maintain theirs. | ['so', 'maintain', 'my', 'assessment', 'and', 'they', 'maintain', 'theirs'] | so -PRON- maintain -PRON- assessment , and -PRON- maintain -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | This perhaps had to happen, and I think it is as it should be. | This perhaps had to happen, and I think it is as it should be. | -350 | 1,997 | 62 | this perhaps had to happen, and i think it is as it should be. | ['this', 'perhaps', 'had', 'to', 'happen', 'and', 'think', 'it', 'is', 'as', 'it', 'should', 'be'] | this perhaps have to happen , and -PRON- think -PRON- be as -PRON- should be . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Now I want to prophesy to those who convicted me, for I am at the point when men prophesy most, when they are about to die. | Now I want to prophesy to those who convicted me, for I am at the point when men prophesy most, when they are about to die. | -350 | 1,997 | 123 | now i want to prophesy to those who convicted me, for i am at the point when men prophesy most, when they are about to die. | ['now', 'want', 'to', 'prophesy', 'to', 'those', 'who', 'convicted', 'me', 'for', 'am', 'at', 'the', 'point', 'when', 'men', 'prophesy', 'most', 'when', 'they', 'are', 'about', 'to', 'die'] | now -PRON- want to prophesy to those who convict -PRON- , for -PRON- be at the point when man prophesy most , when -PRON- be about to die . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I say gentlemen, to those who voted to kill me, that vengeance will come upon you immediately after my death, a vengeance much harder to bear than that which you took in killing me. | I say gentlemen, to those who voted to kill me, that vengeance will come upon you immediately after my death, a vengeance much harder to bear than that which you took in killing me. | -350 | 1,997 | 181 | i say gentlemen, to those who voted to kill me, that vengeance will come upon you immediately after my death, a vengeance much harder to bear than that which you took in killing me. | ['say', 'gentlemen', 'to', 'those', 'who', 'voted', 'to', 'kill', 'me', 'that', 'vengeance', 'will', 'come', 'upon', 'you', 'immediately', 'after', 'my', 'death', 'vengeance', 'much', 'harder', 'to', 'bear', 'than', 'that', 'which', 'you', 'took', 'in', 'killing', 'me'] | -PRON- say gentleman , to those who vote to kill -PRON- , that vengeance will come upon -PRON- immediately after -PRON- death , a vengeance much harder to bear than that which -PRON- take in kill -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | You did this in the belief that you would avoid giving an account of your life, but I maintain that quite the opposite will happen to you. | You did this in the belief that you would avoid giving an account of your life, but I maintain that quite the opposite will happen to you. | -350 | 1,997 | 138 | you did this in the belief that you would avoid giving an account of your life, but i maintain that quite the opposite will happen to you. | ['you', 'did', 'this', 'in', 'the', 'belief', 'that', 'you', 'would', 'avoid', 'giving', 'an', 'account', 'of', 'your', 'life', 'but', 'maintain', 'that', 'quite', 'the', 'opposite', 'will', 'happen', 'to', 'you'] | -PRON- do this in the belief that -PRON- would avoid give an account of -PRON- life , but -PRON- maintain that quite the opposite will happen to -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | There will be more people to test you, whom I now held back, but you did not notice it. | There will be more people to test you, whom I now held back, but you did not notice it. | -350 | 1,997 | 87 | there will be more people to test you, whom i now held back, but you did not notice it. | ['there', 'will', 'be', 'more', 'people', 'to', 'test', 'you', 'whom', 'now', 'held', 'back', 'but', 'you', 'did', 'not', 'notice', 'it'] | there will be more people to test -PRON- , whom -PRON- now hold back , but -PRON- do not notice -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | They will be more difficult to deal with as they will be younger and you will resent them more. | They will be more difficult to deal with as they will be younger and you will resent them more. | -350 | 1,997 | 95 | they will be more difficult to deal with as they will be younger and you will resent them more. | ['they', 'will', 'be', 'more', 'difficult', 'to', 'deal', 'with', 'as', 'they', 'will', 'be', 'younger', 'and', 'you', 'will', 'resent', 'them', 'more'] | -PRON- will be more difficult to deal with as -PRON- will be young and -PRON- will resent -PRON- more . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | You are wrong if you believe that by killing people you will prevent anyone from reproaching you for not living in the right way. | You are wrong if you believe that by killing people you will prevent anyone from reproaching you for not living in the right way. | -350 | 1,997 | 129 | you are wrong if you believe that by killing people you will prevent anyone from reproaching you for not living in the right way. | ['you', 'are', 'wrong', 'if', 'you', 'believe', 'that', 'by', 'killing', 'people', 'you', 'will', 'prevent', 'anyone', 'from', 'reproaching', 'you', 'for', 'not', 'living', 'in', 'the', 'right', 'way'] | -PRON- be wrong if -PRON- believe that by kill people -PRON- will prevent anyone from reproach -PRON- for not live in the right way . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | To escape such tests is neither possible nor good, but it is best and easiest not to discredit others but to prepare oneself to be as good as possible. | To escape such tests is neither possible nor good, but it is best and easiest not to discredit others but to prepare oneself to be as good as possible. | -350 | 1,997 | 151 | to escape such tests is neither possible nor good, but it is best and easiest not to discredit others but to prepare oneself to be as good as possible. | ['to', 'escape', 'such', 'tests', 'is', 'neither', 'possible', 'nor', 'good', 'but', 'it', 'is', 'best', 'and', 'easiest', 'not', 'to', 'discredit', 'others', 'but', 'to', 'prepare', 'oneself', 'to', 'be', 'as', 'good', 'as', 'possible'] | to escape such test be neither possible nor good , but -PRON- be good and easy not to discredit other but to prepare oneself to be as good as possible . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | With this prophecy to you who convicted me, I part from you. | With this prophecy to you who convicted me, I part from you. | -350 | 1,997 | 60 | with this prophecy to you who convicted me, i part from you. | ['with', 'this', 'prophecy', 'to', 'you', 'who', 'convicted', 'me', 'part', 'from', 'you'] | with this prophecy to -PRON- who convict -PRON- , -PRON- part from -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I should be glad to discuss what has happened with those who voted for my acquittal during the time that the officers of the court are busy and I do not yet have to depart to my death. | I should be glad to discuss what has happened with those who voted for my acquittal during the time that the officers of the court are busy and I do not yet have to depart to my death. | -350 | 1,997 | 184 | i should be glad to discuss what has happened with those who voted for my acquittal during the time that the officers of the court are busy and i do not yet have to depart to my death. | ['should', 'be', 'glad', 'to', 'discuss', 'what', 'has', 'happened', 'with', 'those', 'who', 'voted', 'for', 'my', 'acquittal', 'during', 'the', 'time', 'that', 'the', 'officers', 'of', 'the', 'court', 'are', 'busy', 'and', 'do', 'not', 'yet', 'have', 'to', 'depart', 'to', 'my', 'death'] | -PRON- should be glad to discuss what have happen with those who vote for -PRON- acquittal during the time that the officer of the court be busy and -PRON- do not yet have to depart to -PRON- death . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | So, gentlemen, stay with me awhile, for nothing prevents us from talking to each other while it is allowed. | So, gentlemen, stay with me awhile, for nothing prevents us from talking to each other while it is allowed. | -350 | 1,997 | 107 | so, gentlemen, stay with me awhile, for nothing prevents us from talking to each other while it is allowed. | ['so', 'gentlemen', 'stay', 'with', 'me', 'awhile', 'for', 'nothing', 'prevents', 'us', 'from', 'talking', 'to', 'each', 'other', 'while', 'it', 'is', 'allowed'] | so , gentleman , stay with -PRON- awhile , for nothing prevent -PRON- from talk to each other while -PRON- be allow . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | To you, as being my friends, I want to show the meaning of what has occurred. | To you, as being my friends, I want to show the meaning of what has occurred. | -350 | 1,997 | 77 | to you, as being my friends, i want to show the meaning of what has occurred. | ['to', 'you', 'as', 'being', 'my', 'friends', 'want', 'to', 'show', 'the', 'meaning', 'of', 'what', 'has', 'occurred'] | to -PRON- , as be -PRON- friend , -PRON- want to show the meaning of what have occur . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | A surprising thing has happened to me, jurymen you | A surprising thing has happened to me, jurymen you | -350 | 1,997 | 50 | a surprising thing has happened to me, jurymen you | ['surprising', 'thing', 'has', 'happened', 'to', 'me', 'jurymen', 'you'] | a surprising thing have happen to -PRON- , jurymen -PRON- |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I would rightly call jurymen. | I would rightly call jurymen. | -350 | 1,997 | 29 | i would rightly call jurymen. | ['would', 'rightly', 'call', 'jurymen'] | -PRON- would rightly call jurymen . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | At all previous times my familiar prophetic power, my spiritual manifestation, frequently opposed me, even in small matters, when I was about to do something wrong, but now that, as you can see for yourselves, I was faced with what one might think, and what is generally thought to be, the worst of evils, my divine sign has not opposed me, either when I left home at dawn, or when I came into court, or at any time that I was about to say something during my speech. | At all previous times my familiar prophetic power, my spiritual manifestation, frequently opposed me, even in small matters, when I was about to do something wrong, but now that, as you can see for yourselves, I was faced with what one might think, and what is generally thought to be, the worst of evils, my divine sign has not opposed me, either when I left home at dawn, or when I came into court, or at any time that I was about to say something during my speech. | -350 | 1,997 | 467 | at all previous times my familiar prophetic power, my spiritual manifestation, frequently opposed me, even in small matters, when i was about to do something wrong, but now that, as you can see for yourselves, i was faced with what one might think, and what is generally thought to be, the worst of evils, my divine sign has not opposed me, either when i left home at dawn, or when i came into court, or at any time that i was about to say something during my speech. | ['at', 'all', 'previous', 'times', 'my', 'familiar', 'prophetic', 'power', 'my', 'spiritual', 'manifestation', 'frequently', 'opposed', 'me', 'even', 'in', 'small', 'matters', 'when', 'was', 'about', 'to', 'do', 'something', 'wrong', 'but', 'now', 'that', 'as', 'you', 'can', 'see', 'for', 'yourselves', 'was', 'faced', 'with', 'what', 'one', 'might', 'think', 'and', 'what', 'is', 'generally', 'thought', 'to', 'be', 'the', 'worst', 'of', 'evils', 'my', 'divine', 'sign', 'has', 'not', 'opposed', 'me', 'either', 'when', 'left', 'home', 'at', 'dawn', 'or', 'when', 'came', 'into', 'court', 'or', 'at', 'any', 'time', 'that', 'was', 'about', 'to', 'say', 'something', 'during', 'my', 'speech'] | at all previous time -PRON- familiar prophetic power , -PRON- spiritual manifestation , frequently oppose -PRON- , even in small matter , when -PRON- be about to do something wrong , but now that , as -PRON- can see for yourself , -PRON- be face with what one may think , and what be generally think to be , the bad of evil , -PRON- divine sign have not oppose -PRON- , either when -PRON- leave home at dawn , or when -PRON- come into court , or at any time that -PRON- be about to say something during -PRON- speech . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Yet in other talks it often held me back in the middle of my speaking, but now it has opposed no word or deed of mine. | Yet in other talks it often held me back in the middle of my speaking, but now it has opposed no word or deed of mine. | -350 | 1,997 | 118 | yet in other talks it often held me back in the middle of my speaking, but now it has opposed no word or deed of mine. | ['yet', 'in', 'other', 'talks', 'it', 'often', 'held', 'me', 'back', 'in', 'the', 'middle', 'of', 'my', 'speaking', 'but', 'now', 'it', 'has', 'opposed', 'no', 'word', 'or', 'deed', 'of', 'mine'] | yet in other talk -PRON- often hold -PRON- back in the middle of -PRON- speaking , but now -PRON- have oppose no word or deed of -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | What do I think is the reason for this? | What do I think is the reason for this? | -350 | 1,997 | 39 | what do i think is the reason for this? | ['what', 'do', 'think', 'is', 'the', 'reason', 'for', 'this'] | what do -PRON- think be the reason for this ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | What has happened to me may well be a good thing, and those of us who believe death to be an evil are certainly mistaken. | What has happened to me may well be a good thing, and those of us who believe death to be an evil are certainly mistaken. | -350 | 1,997 | 121 | what has happened to me may well be a good thing, and those of us who believe death to be an evil are certainly mistaken. | ['what', 'has', 'happened', 'to', 'me', 'may', 'well', 'be', 'good', 'thing', 'and', 'those', 'of', 'us', 'who', 'believe', 'death', 'to', 'be', 'an', 'evil', 'are', 'certainly', 'mistaken'] | what have happen to -PRON- may well be a good thing , and those of -PRON- who believe death to be an evil be certainly mistaken . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I have convincing proof of this, for it is impossible that my familiar sign did not oppose me if I was not about to do what was right. | I have convincing proof of this, for it is impossible that my familiar sign did not oppose me if I was not about to do what was right. | -350 | 1,997 | 134 | i have convincing proof of this, for it is impossible that my familiar sign did not oppose me if i was not about to do what was right. | ['have', 'convincing', 'proof', 'of', 'this', 'for', 'it', 'is', 'impossible', 'that', 'my', 'familiar', 'sign', 'did', 'not', 'oppose', 'me', 'if', 'was', 'not', 'about', 'to', 'do', 'what', 'was', 'right'] | -PRON- have convincing proof of this , for -PRON- be impossible that -PRON- familiar sign do not oppose -PRON- if -PRON- be not about to do what be right . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Let us reflect in this way, too, that there is good hope that death is a blessing, | Let us reflect in this way, too, that there is good hope that death is a blessing, | -350 | 1,997 | 82 | let us reflect in this way, too, that there is good hope that death is a blessing, | ['let', 'us', 'reflect', 'in', 'this', 'way', 'too', 'that', 'there', 'is', 'good', 'hope', 'that', 'death', 'is', 'blessing'] | let -PRON- reflect in this way , too , that there be good hope that death be a blessing , |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | for it is one of two things: either the dead are nothing and have no perception of anything, or it is, as we are told, a change and a relocating for the soul from here to another place. | for it is one of two things: either the dead are nothing and have no perception of anything, or it is, as we are told, a change and a relocating for the soul from here to another place. | -350 | 1,997 | 185 | for it is one of two things: either the dead are nothing and have no perception of anything, or it is, as we are told, a change and a relocating for the soul from here to another place. | ['for', 'it', 'is', 'one', 'of', 'two', 'things', 'either', 'the', 'dead', 'are', 'nothing', 'and', 'have', 'no', 'perception', 'of', 'anything', 'or', 'it', 'is', 'as', 'we', 'are', 'told', 'change', 'and', 'relocating', 'for', 'the', 'soul', 'from', 'here', 'to', 'another', 'place'] | for -PRON- be one of two thing : either the dead be nothing and have no perception of anything , or -PRON- be , as -PRON- be tell , a change and a relocating for the soul from here to another place . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | If it is complete lack of perception, like a dreamless sleep, then death would be a great advantage. | If it is complete lack of perception, like a dreamless sleep, then death would be a great advantage. | -350 | 1,997 | 100 | if it is complete lack of perception, like a dreamless sleep, then death would be a great advantage. | ['if', 'it', 'is', 'complete', 'lack', 'of', 'perception', 'like', 'dreamless', 'sleep', 'then', 'death', 'would', 'be', 'great', 'advantage'] | if -PRON- be complete lack of perception , like a dreamless sleep , then death would be a great advantage . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | For I think that if one had to pick out that night during which a man slept soundly and did not dream, put beside it the other nights and days of his life, and then see how many days and nights had been better and more pleasant than that night, not only a private person but the great king would find them easy to count compared with the other days and nights. | For I think that if one had to pick out that night during which a man slept soundly and did not dream, put beside it the other nights and days of his life, and then see how many days and nights had been better and more pleasant than that night, not only a private person but the great king would find them easy to count compared with the other days and nights. | -350 | 1,997 | 360 | for i think that if one had to pick out that night during which a man slept soundly and did not dream, put beside it the other nights and days of his life, and then see how many days and nights had been better and more pleasant than that night, not only a private person but the great king would find them easy to count compared with the other days and nights. | ['for', 'think', 'that', 'if', 'one', 'had', 'to', 'pick', 'out', 'that', 'night', 'during', 'which', 'man', 'slept', 'soundly', 'and', 'did', 'not', 'dream', 'put', 'beside', 'it', 'the', 'other', 'nights', 'and', 'days', 'of', 'his', 'life', 'and', 'then', 'see', 'how', 'many', 'days', 'and', 'nights', 'had', 'been', 'better', 'and', 'more', 'pleasant', 'than', 'that', 'night', 'not', 'only', 'private', 'person', 'but', 'the', 'great', 'king', 'would', 'find', 'them', 'easy', 'to', 'count', 'compared', 'with', 'the', 'other', 'days', 'and', 'nights'] | for -PRON- think that if one have to pick out that night during which a man sleep soundly and do not dream , put beside -PRON- the other night and day of -PRON- life , and then see how many day and night have be well and more pleasant than that night , not only a private person but the great king would find -PRON- easy to count compare with the other day and night . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | If death is like this I say it is an advantage, for all eternity would then seem to be no more than a single night. | If death is like this I say it is an advantage, for all eternity would then seem to be no more than a single night. | -350 | 1,997 | 115 | if death is like this i say it is an advantage, for all eternity would then seem to be no more than a single night. | ['if', 'death', 'is', 'like', 'this', 'say', 'it', 'is', 'an', 'advantage', 'for', 'all', 'eternity', 'would', 'then', 'seem', 'to', 'be', 'no', 'more', 'than', 'single', 'night'] | if death be like this -PRON- say -PRON- be an advantage , for all eternity would then seem to be no more than a single night . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | If, on the other hand, death is a change from here to another place, and what we are told is true and all who have died are there, what greater blessing could there be, gentlemen of the jury? | If, on the other hand, death is a change from here to another place, and what we are told is true and all who have died are there, what greater blessing could there be, gentlemen of the jury? | -350 | 1,997 | 191 | if, on the other hand, death is a change from here to another place, and what we are told is true and all who have died are there, what greater blessing could there be, gentlemen of the jury? | ['if', 'on', 'the', 'other', 'hand', 'death', 'is', 'change', 'from', 'here', 'to', 'another', 'place', 'and', 'what', 'we', 'are', 'told', 'is', 'true', 'and', 'all', 'who', 'have', 'died', 'are', 'there', 'what', 'greater', 'blessing', 'could', 'there', 'be', 'gentlemen', 'of', 'the', 'jury'] | if , on the other hand , death be a change from here to another place , and what -PRON- be tell be true and all who have die be there , what great blessing could there be , gentleman of the jury ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | If anyone arriving in Hades will have escaped from those who call themselves jurymen here, and will find those true jurymen who are said to sit in judgment there, Minos and Rhadamanthus and Aeacus and Triptolemus and the other demi gods who have been upright in their own life, would that be a poor kind of change? | If anyone arriving in Hades will have escaped from those who call themselves jurymen here, and will find those true jurymen who are said to sit in judgment there, Minos and Rhadamanthus and Aeacus and Triptolemus and the other demi gods who have been upright in their own life, would that be a poor kind of change? | -350 | 1,997 | 314 | if anyone arriving in hades will have escaped from those who call themselves jurymen here, and will find those true jurymen who are said to sit in judgment there, minos and rhadamanthus and aeacus and triptolemus and the other demi gods who have been upright in their own life, would that be a poor kind of change? | ['if', 'anyone', 'arriving', 'in', 'hades', 'will', 'have', 'escaped', 'from', 'those', 'who', 'call', 'themselves', 'jurymen', 'here', 'and', 'will', 'find', 'those', 'true', 'jurymen', 'who', 'are', 'said', 'to', 'sit', 'in', 'judgment', 'there', 'minos', 'and', 'rhadamanthus', 'and', 'aeacus', 'and', 'triptolemus', 'and', 'the', 'other', 'demi', 'gods', 'who', 'have', 'been', 'upright', 'in', 'their', 'own', 'life', 'would', 'that', 'be', 'poor', 'kind', 'of', 'change'] | if anyone arrive in Hades will have escape from those who call -PRON- jurymen here , and will find those true jurymen who be say to sit in judgment there , Minos and Rhadamanthus and Aeacus and Triptolemus and the other demi god who have be upright in -PRON- own life , would that be a poor kind of change ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Again, what would one of you give to keep company with Orpheus and Musaeus, Hesiod and Homer? | Again, what would one of you give to keep company with Orpheus and Musaeus, Hesiod and Homer? | -350 | 1,997 | 93 | again, what would one of you give to keep company with orpheus and musaeus, hesiod and homer? | ['again', 'what', 'would', 'one', 'of', 'you', 'give', 'to', 'keep', 'company', 'with', 'orpheus', 'and', 'musaeus', 'hesiod', 'and', 'homer'] | again , what would one of -PRON- give to keep company with Orpheus and Musaeus , Hesiod and Homer ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I am willing to die many times if that is true. | I am willing to die many times if that is true. | -350 | 1,997 | 47 | i am willing to die many times if that is true. | ['am', 'willing', 'to', 'die', 'many', 'times', 'if', 'that', 'is', 'true'] | -PRON- be willing to die many time if that be true . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | It would be a wonderful way for me to spend my time whenever I met Palamedes and Ajax, the son of Telamon, and any other of the men of old who died through an unjust conviction, to compare my experience with theirs. | It would be a wonderful way for me to spend my time whenever I met Palamedes and Ajax, the son of Telamon, and any other of the men of old who died through an unjust conviction, to compare my experience with theirs. | -350 | 1,997 | 215 | it would be a wonderful way for me to spend my time whenever i met palamedes and ajax, the son of telamon, and any other of the men of old who died through an unjust conviction, to compare my experience with theirs. | ['it', 'would', 'be', 'wonderful', 'way', 'for', 'me', 'to', 'spend', 'my', 'time', 'whenever', 'met', 'palamedes', 'and', 'ajax', 'the', 'son', 'of', 'telamon', 'and', 'any', 'other', 'of', 'the', 'men', 'of', 'old', 'who', 'died', 'through', 'an', 'unjust', 'conviction', 'to', 'compare', 'my', 'experience', 'with', 'theirs'] | -PRON- would be a wonderful way for -PRON- to spend -PRON- time whenever -PRON- meet Palamedes and Ajax , the son of Telamon , and any other of the man of old who die through an unjust conviction , to compare -PRON- experience with -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I think it would be pleasant. | I think it would be pleasant. | -350 | 1,997 | 29 | i think it would be pleasant. | ['think', 'it', 'would', 'be', 'pleasant'] | -PRON- think -PRON- would be pleasant . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Most important, I could spend my time testing and examining people there, as I do here, as to who among them is wise, and who thinks he is, but is not. | Most important, I could spend my time testing and examining people there, as I do here, as to who among them is wise, and who thinks he is, but is not. | -350 | 1,997 | 151 | most important, i could spend my time testing and examining people there, as i do here, as to who among them is wise, and who thinks he is, but is not. | ['most', 'important', 'could', 'spend', 'my', 'time', 'testing', 'and', 'examining', 'people', 'there', 'as', 'do', 'here', 'as', 'to', 'who', 'among', 'them', 'is', 'wise', 'and', 'who', 'thinks', 'he', 'is', 'but', 'is', 'not'] | most important , -PRON- could spend -PRON- time testing and examine people there , as -PRON- do here , as to who among -PRON- be wise , and who think -PRON- be , but be not . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | What would one not give, gentlemen of the jury, for the opportunity to examine the man who led the great expedition against Troy, or Odysseus, or Sisyphus, and innumerable other men and women one could mention? | What would one not give, gentlemen of the jury, for the opportunity to examine the man who led the great expedition against Troy, or Odysseus, or Sisyphus, and innumerable other men and women one could mention? | -350 | 1,997 | 210 | what would one not give, gentlemen of the jury, for the opportunity to examine the man who led the great expedition against troy, or odysseus, or sisyphus, and innumerable other men and women one could mention? | ['what', 'would', 'one', 'not', 'give', 'gentlemen', 'of', 'the', 'jury', 'for', 'the', 'opportunity', 'to', 'examine', 'the', 'man', 'who', 'led', 'the', 'great', 'expedition', 'against', 'troy', 'or', 'odysseus', 'or', 'sisyphus', 'and', 'innumerable', 'other', 'men', 'and', 'women', 'one', 'could', 'mention'] | what would one not give , gentleman of the jury , for the opportunity to examine the man who lead the great expedition against Troy , or Odysseus , or Sisyphus , and innumerable other man and woman one could mention ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | It would be an extraordinary happiness to talk with them, to keep company with them and examine them. | It would be an extraordinary happiness to talk with them, to keep company with them and examine them. | -350 | 1,997 | 101 | it would be an extraordinary happiness to talk with them, to keep company with them and examine them. | ['it', 'would', 'be', 'an', 'extraordinary', 'happiness', 'to', 'talk', 'with', 'them', 'to', 'keep', 'company', 'with', 'them', 'and', 'examine', 'them'] | -PRON- would be an extraordinary happiness to talk with -PRON- , to keep company with -PRON- and examine -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | In any case, they would certainly not put one to death for doing so. | In any case, they would certainly not put one to death for doing so. | -350 | 1,997 | 68 | in any case, they would certainly not put one to death for doing so. | ['in', 'any', 'case', 'they', 'would', 'certainly', 'not', 'put', 'one', 'to', 'death', 'for', 'doing', 'so'] | in any case , -PRON- would certainly not put one to death for do so . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | They are happier there than we are here in other respects, and for the rest of time they are deathless, if indeed what we are told is true. | They are happier there than we are here in other respects, and for the rest of time they are deathless, if indeed what we are told is true. | -350 | 1,997 | 139 | they are happier there than we are here in other respects, and for the rest of time they are deathless, if indeed what we are told is true. | ['they', 'are', 'happier', 'there', 'than', 'we', 'are', 'here', 'in', 'other', 'respects', 'and', 'for', 'the', 'rest', 'of', 'time', 'they', 'are', 'deathless', 'if', 'indeed', 'what', 'we', 'are', 'told', 'is', 'true'] | -PRON- be happy there than -PRON- be here in other respect , and for the rest of time -PRON- be deathless , if indeed what -PRON- be tell be true . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | You too must be of good hope as regards death, gentlemen of the jury, and keep this one truth in mind, that a good man cannot be harmed either in life or in death, and that his affairs are not neglected by the gods. | You too must be of good hope as regards death, gentlemen of the jury, and keep this one truth in mind, that a good man cannot be harmed either in life or in death, and that his affairs are not neglected by the gods. | -350 | 1,997 | 215 | you too must be of good hope as regards death, gentlemen of the jury, and keep this one truth in mind, that a good man cannot be harmed either in life or in death, and that his affairs are not neglected by the gods. | ['you', 'too', 'must', 'be', 'of', 'good', 'hope', 'as', 'regards', 'death', 'gentlemen', 'of', 'the', 'jury', 'and', 'keep', 'this', 'one', 'truth', 'in', 'mind', 'that', 'good', 'man', 'cannot', 'be', 'harmed', 'either', 'in', 'life', 'or', 'in', 'death', 'and', 'that', 'his', 'affairs', 'are', 'not', 'neglected', 'by', 'the', 'gods'] | -PRON- too must be of good hope as regard death , gentleman of the jury , and keep this one truth in mind , that a good man can not be harm either in life or in death , and that -PRON- affair be not neglect by the god . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | What has happened to me now has not happened of itself, but it is clear to me that it was better for me to die now and to escape from trouble. | What has happened to me now has not happened of itself, but it is clear to me that it was better for me to die now and to escape from trouble. | -350 | 1,997 | 142 | what has happened to me now has not happened of itself, but it is clear to me that it was better for me to die now and to escape from trouble. | ['what', 'has', 'happened', 'to', 'me', 'now', 'has', 'not', 'happened', 'of', 'itself', 'but', 'it', 'is', 'clear', 'to', 'me', 'that', 'it', 'was', 'better', 'for', 'me', 'to', 'die', 'now', 'and', 'to', 'escape', 'from', 'trouble'] | what have happen to -PRON- now have not happen of -PRON- , but -PRON- be clear to -PRON- that -PRON- be well for -PRON- to die now and to escape from trouble . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | That is why my divine sign did not oppose me at any point. | That is why my divine sign did not oppose me at any point. | -350 | 1,997 | 58 | that is why my divine sign did not oppose me at any point. | ['that', 'is', 'why', 'my', 'divine', 'sign', 'did', 'not', 'oppose', 'me', 'at', 'any', 'point'] | that be why -PRON- divine sign do not oppose -PRON- at any point . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | So I am certainly not angry with those who convicted me, or with my accusers. | So I am certainly not angry with those who convicted me, or with my accusers. | -350 | 1,997 | 77 | so i am certainly not angry with those who convicted me, or with my accusers. | ['so', 'am', 'certainly', 'not', 'angry', 'with', 'those', 'who', 'convicted', 'me', 'or', 'with', 'my', 'accusers'] | so -PRON- be certainly not angry with those who convict -PRON- , or with -PRON- accuser . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Of course that was not their purpose when they accused and convicted me, but they thought they were hurting me, and for this they deserve blame. | Of course that was not their purpose when they accused and convicted me, but they thought they were hurting me, and for this they deserve blame. | -350 | 1,997 | 144 | of course that was not their purpose when they accused and convicted me, but they thought they were hurting me, and for this they deserve blame. | ['of', 'course', 'that', 'was', 'not', 'their', 'purpose', 'when', 'they', 'accused', 'and', 'convicted', 'me', 'but', 'they', 'thought', 'they', 'were', 'hurting', 'me', 'and', 'for', 'this', 'they', 'deserve', 'blame'] | of course that be not -PRON- purpose when -PRON- accuse and convict -PRON- , but -PRON- think -PRON- be hurt -PRON- , and for this -PRON- deserve blame . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | This much I ask from them: when my sons grow up, avenge yourselves by causing them the same kind of grief that I caused you, if you think they care for money or anything else more than they care for virtue, or if they think they are somebody when they are nobody. | This much I ask from them: when my sons grow up, avenge yourselves by causing them the same kind of grief that I caused you, if you think they care for money or anything else more than they care for virtue, or if they think they are somebody when they are nobody. | -350 | 1,997 | 263 | this much i ask from them: when my sons grow up, avenge yourselves by causing them the same kind of grief that i caused you, if you think they care for money or anything else more than they care for virtue, or if they think they are somebody when they are nobody. | ['this', 'much', 'ask', 'from', 'them', 'when', 'my', 'sons', 'grow', 'up', 'avenge', 'yourselves', 'by', 'causing', 'them', 'the', 'same', 'kind', 'of', 'grief', 'that', 'caused', 'you', 'if', 'you', 'think', 'they', 'care', 'for', 'money', 'or', 'anything', 'else', 'more', 'than', 'they', 'care', 'for', 'virtue', 'or', 'if', 'they', 'think', 'they', 'are', 'somebody', 'when', 'they', 'are', 'nobody'] | this much -PRON- ask from -PRON- : when -PRON- son grow up , avenge yourself by cause -PRON- the same kind of grief that -PRON- cause -PRON- , if -PRON- think -PRON- care for money or anything else more than -PRON- care for virtue , or if -PRON- think -PRON- be somebody when -PRON- be nobody . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Reproach them as I reproach you, that they do not care for the right things and think they are worthy when they are not worthy of anything. | Reproach them as I reproach you, that they do not care for the right things and think they are worthy when they are not worthy of anything. | -350 | 1,997 | 139 | reproach them as i reproach you, that they do not care for the right things and think they are worthy when they are not worthy of anything. | ['reproach', 'them', 'as', 'reproach', 'you', 'that', 'they', 'do', 'not', 'care', 'for', 'the', 'right', 'things', 'and', 'think', 'they', 'are', 'worthy', 'when', 'they', 'are', 'not', 'worthy', 'of', 'anything'] | reproach -PRON- as -PRON- reproach -PRON- , that -PRON- do not care for the right thing and think -PRON- be worthy when -PRON- be not worthy of anything . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | If you do this, I shall have been justly treated by you, and my sons also. | If you do this, I shall have been justly treated by you, and my sons also. | -350 | 1,997 | 74 | if you do this, i shall have been justly treated by you, and my sons also. | ['if', 'you', 'do', 'this', 'shall', 'have', 'been', 'justly', 'treated', 'by', 'you', 'and', 'my', 'sons', 'also'] | if -PRON- do this , -PRON- shall have be justly treat by -PRON- , and -PRON- son also . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Now the hour to part has come. | Now the hour to part has come. | -350 | 1,997 | 30 | now the hour to part has come. | ['now', 'the', 'hour', 'to', 'part', 'has', 'come'] | now the hour to part have come . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I go to die, you go to live. | I go to die, you go to live. | -350 | 1,997 | 28 | i go to die, you go to live. | ['go', 'to', 'die', 'you', 'go', 'to', 'live'] | -PRON- go to die , -PRON- go to live . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Which of us goes to the better lot is known to no one, except the god. | Which of us goes to the better lot is known to no one, except the god. | -350 | 1,997 | 70 | which of us goes to the better lot is known to no one, except the god. | ['which', 'of', 'us', 'goes', 'to', 'the', 'better', 'lot', 'is', 'known', 'to', 'no', 'one', 'except', 'the', 'god'] | which of -PRON- go to the well lot be know to no one , except the god . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | As the beginning of the Phaedo relates, Socrates did not die until a month after his trial, which followed by a day the sailing of the Athenian state galley on an annual religious mission to the island of Delos; no executions were permitted during its absence. | As the beginning of the Phaedo relates, Socrates did not die until a month after his trial, which followed by a day the sailing of the Athenian state galley on an annual religious mission to the island of Delos; no executions were permitted during its absence. | -350 | 1,997 | 260 | as the beginning of the phaedo relates, socrates did not die until a month after his trial, which followed by a day the sailing of the athenian state galley on an annual religious mission to the island of delos; no executions were permitted during its absence. | ['as', 'the', 'beginning', 'of', 'the', 'phaedo', 'relates', 'socrates', 'did', 'not', 'die', 'until', 'month', 'after', 'his', 'trial', 'which', 'followed', 'by', 'day', 'the', 'sailing', 'of', 'the', 'athenian', 'state', 'galley', 'on', 'an', 'annual', 'religious', 'mission', 'to', 'the', 'island', 'of', 'delos', 'no', 'executions', 'were', 'permitted', 'during', 'its', 'absence'] | as the beginning of the Phaedo relate , Socrates do not die until a month after -PRON- trial , which follow by a day the sailing of the athenian state galley on an annual religious mission to the island of Delos ; no execution be permit during -PRON- absence . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Crito comes to tell Socrates of its anticipated arrival later that day and to make one last effort to persuade him to allow his friends to save him by bribing his jailers and bundling him off somewhere beyond the reach of Athenian law. | Crito comes to tell Socrates of its anticipated arrival later that day and to make one last effort to persuade him to allow his friends to save him by bribing his jailers and bundling him off somewhere beyond the reach of Athenian law. | -350 | 1,997 | 235 | crito comes to tell socrates of its anticipated arrival later that day and to make one last effort to persuade him to allow his friends to save him by bribing his jailers and bundling him off somewhere beyond the reach of athenian law. | ['crito', 'comes', 'to', 'tell', 'socrates', 'of', 'its', 'anticipated', 'arrival', 'later', 'that', 'day', 'and', 'to', 'make', 'one', 'last', 'effort', 'to', 'persuade', 'him', 'to', 'allow', 'his', 'friends', 'to', 'save', 'him', 'by', 'bribing', 'his', 'jailers', 'and', 'bundling', 'him', 'off', 'somewhere', 'beyond', 'the', 'reach', 'of', 'athenian', 'law'] | Crito come to tell Socrates of -PRON- anticipate arrival later that day and to make one last effort to persuade -PRON- to allow -PRON- friend to save -PRON- by bribe -PRON- jailer and bundle -PRON- off somewhere beyond the reach of athenian law . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Crito indicates that most people expect his friends to do this unless (dishonorably) they value their money more than their friend. | Crito indicates that most people expect his friends to do this unless (dishonorably) they value their money more than their friend. | -350 | 1,997 | 131 | crito indicates that most people expect his friends to do this unless (dishonorably) they value their money more than their friend. | ['crito', 'indicates', 'that', 'most', 'people', 'expect', 'his', 'friends', 'to', 'do', 'this', 'unless', 'dishonorably', 'they', 'value', 'their', 'money', 'more', 'than', 'their', 'friend'] | Crito indicate that most people expect -PRON- friend to do this unless ( dishonorably ) -PRON- value -PRON- money more than -PRON- friend . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Socrates, however, refuses. | Socrates, however, refuses. | -350 | 1,997 | 27 | socrates, however, refuses. | ['socrates', 'however', 'refuses'] | Socrates , however , refuse . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Even if people do expect it, to do that would be grossly unjust. | Even if people do expect it, to do that would be grossly unjust. | -350 | 1,997 | 64 | even if people do expect it, to do that would be grossly unjust. | ['even', 'if', 'people', 'do', 'expect', 'it', 'to', 'do', 'that', 'would', 'be', 'grossly', 'unjust'] | even if people do expect -PRON- , to do that would be grossly unjust . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Both Crito's arguments in favor of his plan and Socrates' in rejecting it are rather jumbled as perhaps befits the pressure and excitement of the moment. | Both Crito's arguments in favor of his plan and Socrates' in rejecting it are rather jumbled as perhaps befits the pressure and excitement of the moment. | -350 | 1,997 | 153 | both crito's arguments in favor of his plan and socrates' in rejecting it are rather jumbled as perhaps befits the pressure and excitement of the moment. | ['both', 'crito', 'arguments', 'in', 'favor', 'of', 'his', 'plan', 'and', 'socrates', 'in', 'rejecting', 'it', 'are', 'rather', 'jumbled', 'as', 'perhaps', 'befits', 'the', 'pressure', 'and', 'excitement', 'of', 'the', 'moment'] | both Crito 's argument in favor of -PRON- plan and Socrates ' in reject -PRON- be rather jumbled as perhaps befit the pressure and excitement of the moment . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Crito cites the damage to his and Socrates' other friends' reputations and delicately minimizes any financial loss he might suffer, in case Socrates might be unwilling to accept any great sacrifice from a friend. | Crito cites the damage to his and Socrates' other friends' reputations and delicately minimizes any financial loss he might suffer, in case Socrates might be unwilling to accept any great sacrifice from a friend. | -350 | 1,997 | 212 | crito cites the damage to his and socrates' other friends' reputations and delicately minimizes any financial loss he might suffer, in case socrates might be unwilling to accept any great sacrifice from a friend. | ['crito', 'cites', 'the', 'damage', 'to', 'his', 'and', 'socrates', 'other', 'friends', 'reputations', 'and', 'delicately', 'minimizes', 'any', 'financial', 'loss', 'he', 'might', 'suffer', 'in', 'case', 'socrates', 'might', 'be', 'unwilling', 'to', 'accept', 'any', 'great', 'sacrifice', 'from', 'friend'] | Crito cite the damage to -PRON- and Socrates ' other friend ' reputation and delicately minimize any financial loss -PRON- may suffer , in case Socrates may be unwilling to accept any great sacrifice from a friend . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Socrates witheringly dismisses the first consideration and ignores the second. | Socrates witheringly dismisses the first consideration and ignores the second. | -350 | 1,997 | 78 | socrates witheringly dismisses the first consideration and ignores the second. | ['socrates', 'witheringly', 'dismisses', 'the', 'first', 'consideration', 'and', 'ignores', 'the', 'second'] | Socrates witheringly dismiss the first consideration and ignore the second . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | But Crito also claims that it would actually be unjust of Socrates to stay. | But Crito also claims that it would actually be unjust of Socrates to stay. | -350 | 1,997 | 75 | but crito also claims that it would actually be unjust of socrates to stay. | ['but', 'crito', 'also', 'claims', 'that', 'it', 'would', 'actually', 'be', 'unjust', 'of', 'socrates', 'to', 'stay'] | but Crito also claim that -PRON- would actually be unjust of Socrates to stay . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | That would allow his enemies to triumph over him and his friends, including his young sons, whom he will abandon by going docilely to his death: a person ought not to take lying down an attack on the things he holds most dear, including philosophy itself and the philosophical life to which he and (presumably) his friends are devoted. | That would allow his enemies to triumph over him and his friends, including his young sons, whom he will abandon by going docilely to his death: a person ought not to take lying down an attack on the things he holds most dear, including philosophy itself and the philosophical life to which he and (presumably) his friends are devoted. | -350 | 1,997 | 335 | that would allow his enemies to triumph over him and his friends, including his young sons, whom he will abandon by going docilely to his death: a person ought not to take lying down an attack on the things he holds most dear, including philosophy itself and the philosophical life to which he and (presumably) his friends are devoted. | ['that', 'would', 'allow', 'his', 'enemies', 'to', 'triumph', 'over', 'him', 'and', 'his', 'friends', 'including', 'his', 'young', 'sons', 'whom', 'he', 'will', 'abandon', 'by', 'going', 'docilely', 'to', 'his', 'death', 'person', 'ought', 'not', 'to', 'take', 'lying', 'down', 'an', 'attack', 'on', 'the', 'things', 'he', 'holds', 'most', 'dear', 'including', 'philosophy', 'itself', 'and', 'the', 'philosophical', 'life', 'to', 'which', 'he', 'and', 'presumably', 'his', 'friends', 'are', 'devoted'] | that would allow -PRON- enemy to triumph over -PRON- and -PRON- friend , include -PRON- young son , whom -PRON- will abandon by go docilely to -PRON- death : a person ought not to take lie down an attack on the thing -PRON- hold most dear , include philosophy -PRON- and the philosophical life to which -PRON- and ( presumably ) -PRON- friend be devoted . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Here we hear strains of the time honored Greek idea that justice is helping one's friends and harming one's enemies, cited by Polemarchus in I. | Here we hear strains of the time honored Greek idea that justice is helping one's friends and harming one's enemies, cited by Polemarchus in I. | -350 | 1,997 | 143 | here we hear strains of the time honored greek idea that justice is helping one's friends and harming one's enemies, cited by polemarchus in i. | ['here', 'we', 'hear', 'strains', 'of', 'the', 'time', 'honored', 'greek', 'idea', 'that', 'justice', 'is', 'helping', 'one', 'friends', 'and', 'harming', 'one', 'enemies', 'cited', 'by', 'polemarchus', 'in'] | here -PRON- hear strain of the time honor greek idea that justice be help one 's friend and harm one 's enemy , cite by Polemarchus in I. |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | (But Crito does not propose harming their enemies only preventing them from having their way.) | (But Crito does not propose harming their enemies only preventing them from having their way.) | -350 | 1,997 | 94 | (but crito does not propose harming their enemies only preventing them from having their way.) | ['but', 'crito', 'does', 'not', 'propose', 'harming', 'their', 'enemies', 'only', 'preventing', 'them', 'from', 'having', 'their', 'way'] | ( but Crito do not propose harm -PRON- enemy only prevent -PRON- from have -PRON- way . ) |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | As to his children, Socrates responds that they will be as well or better cared for after his death than if he resisted it and went into exile. | As to his children, Socrates responds that they will be as well or better cared for after his death than if he resisted it and went into exile. | -350 | 1,997 | 143 | as to his children, socrates responds that they will be as well or better cared for after his death than if he resisted it and went into exile. | ['as', 'to', 'his', 'children', 'socrates', 'responds', 'that', 'they', 'will', 'be', 'as', 'well', 'or', 'better', 'cared', 'for', 'after', 'his', 'death', 'than', 'if', 'he', 'resisted', 'it', 'and', 'went', 'into', 'exile'] | as to -PRON- child , Socrates respond that -PRON- will be as well or better care for after -PRON- death than if -PRON- resist -PRON- and go into exile . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | But ironically, considering his own subsequent arguments for accepting his death, he seems not to hear the larger claim of injustice that Crito lodges. | But ironically, considering his own subsequent arguments for accepting his death, he seems not to hear the larger claim of injustice that Crito lodges. | -350 | 1,997 | 151 | but ironically, considering his own subsequent arguments for accepting his death, he seems not to hear the larger claim of injustice that crito lodges. | ['but', 'ironically', 'considering', 'his', 'own', 'subsequent', 'arguments', 'for', 'accepting', 'his', 'death', 'he', 'seems', 'not', 'to', 'hear', 'the', 'larger', 'claim', 'of', 'injustice', 'that', 'crito', 'lodges'] | but ironically , consider -PRON- own subsequent argument for accept -PRON- death , -PRON- seem not to hear the large claim of injustice that Crito lodge . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Crito's jumbled presentation of his case facilitates this. | Crito's jumbled presentation of his case facilitates this. | -350 | 1,997 | 58 | crito's jumbled presentation of his case facilitates this. | ['crito', 'jumbled', 'presentation', 'of', 'his', 'case', 'facilitates', 'this'] | Crito 's jumbled presentation of -PRON- case facilitate this . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Unmoved by the claims of justice grounded in his private relationships to friends and family, Socrates appeals to the standards of civic justice imbedded in his relations as a citizen to the Athenian people and to the Athenian system of law. | Unmoved by the claims of justice grounded in his private relationships to friends and family, Socrates appeals to the standards of civic justice imbedded in his relations as a citizen to the Athenian people and to the Athenian system of law. | -350 | 1,997 | 241 | unmoved by the claims of justice grounded in his private relationships to friends and family, socrates appeals to the standards of civic justice imbedded in his relations as a citizen to the athenian people and to the athenian system of law. | ['unmoved', 'by', 'the', 'claims', 'of', 'justice', 'grounded', 'in', 'his', 'private', 'relationships', 'to', 'friends', 'and', 'family', 'socrates', 'appeals', 'to', 'the', 'standards', 'of', 'civic', 'justice', 'imbedded', 'in', 'his', 'relations', 'as', 'citizen', 'to', 'the', 'athenian', 'people', 'and', 'to', 'the', 'athenian', 'system', 'of', 'law'] | unmoved by the claim of justice ground in -PRON- private relationship to friend and family , Socrates appeal to the standard of civic justice imbed in -PRON- relation as a citizen to the athenian people and to the athenian system of law . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | He claims that a citizen is necessarily, given the benefits he has enjoyed under the laws of the city, their slave, justly required to do whatever they ask, and more forbidden to attack them than to violate his own parents. | He claims that a citizen is necessarily, given the benefits he has enjoyed under the laws of the city, their slave, justly required to do whatever they ask, and more forbidden to attack them than to violate his own parents. | -350 | 1,997 | 223 | he claims that a citizen is necessarily, given the benefits he has enjoyed under the laws of the city, their slave, justly required to do whatever they ask, and more forbidden to attack them than to violate his own parents. | ['he', 'claims', 'that', 'citizen', 'is', 'necessarily', 'given', 'the', 'benefits', 'he', 'has', 'enjoyed', 'under', 'the', 'laws', 'of', 'the', 'city', 'their', 'slave', 'justly', 'required', 'to', 'do', 'whatever', 'they', 'ask', 'and', 'more', 'forbidden', 'to', 'attack', 'them', 'than', 'to', 'violate', 'his', 'own', 'parents'] | -PRON- claim that a citizen be necessarily , give the benefit -PRON- have enjoy under the law of the city , -PRON- slave , justly require to do whatever -PRON- ask , and more forbidden to attack -PRON- than to violate -PRON- own parent . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | That would be retaliation rendering a wrong for the wrong received in his unjust condemnation and retaliation is never just. | That would be retaliation rendering a wrong for the wrong received in his unjust condemnation and retaliation is never just. | -350 | 1,997 | 124 | that would be retaliation rendering a wrong for the wrong received in his unjust condemnation and retaliation is never just. | ['that', 'would', 'be', 'retaliation', 'rendering', 'wrong', 'for', 'the', 'wrong', 'received', 'in', 'his', 'unjust', 'condemnation', 'and', 'retaliation', 'is', 'never', 'just'] | that would be retaliation render a wrong for the wrong receive in -PRON- unjust condemnation and retaliation be never just . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | But what if he chose to depart not in an Crito unjust spirit of retaliation, but only in order to evade the ill consequences of the unjust condemnation for himself and his friends and family? | But what if he chose to depart not in an Crito unjust spirit of retaliation, but only in order to evade the ill consequences of the unjust condemnation for himself and his friends and family? | -350 | 1,997 | 191 | but what if he chose to depart not in an crito unjust spirit of retaliation, but only in order to evade the ill consequences of the unjust condemnation for himself and his friends and family? | ['but', 'what', 'if', 'he', 'chose', 'to', 'depart', 'not', 'in', 'an', 'crito', 'unjust', 'spirit', 'of', 'retaliation', 'but', 'only', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'evade', 'the', 'ill', 'consequences', 'of', 'the', 'unjust', 'condemnation', 'for', 'himself', 'and', 'his', 'friends', 'and', 'family'] | but what if -PRON- choose to depart not in an Crito unjust spirit of retaliation , but only in order to evade the ill consequence of the unjust condemnation for -PRON- and -PRON- friend and family ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | As if recognizing that loophole, Socrates also develops a celebrated early version of the social contract a 'contract' between the laws or the city and each citizen, not among the citizens themselves with the argument that now, after he is condemned by an Athenian court and has exhausted all legal appeals, he must, in justice to his implicit promise, abide by the laws' final judgment and accept his death sentence. | As if recognizing that loophole, Socrates also develops a celebrated early version of the social contract a 'contract' between the laws or the city and each citizen, not among the citizens themselves with the argument that now, after he is condemned by an Athenian court and has exhausted all legal appeals, he must, in justice to his implicit promise, abide by the laws' final judgment and accept his death sentence. | -350 | 1,997 | 417 | as if recognizing that loophole, socrates also develops a celebrated early version of the social contract a 'contract' between the laws or the city and each citizen, not among the citizens themselves with the argument that now, after he is condemned by an athenian court and has exhausted all legal appeals, he must, in justice to his implicit promise, abide by the laws' final judgment and accept his death sentence. | ['as', 'if', 'recognizing', 'that', 'loophole', 'socrates', 'also', 'develops', 'celebrated', 'early', 'version', 'of', 'the', 'social', 'contract', 'contract', 'between', 'the', 'laws', 'or', 'the', 'city', 'and', 'each', 'citizen', 'not', 'among', 'the', 'citizens', 'themselves', 'with', 'the', 'argument', 'that', 'now', 'after', 'he', 'is', 'condemned', 'by', 'an', 'athenian', 'court', 'and', 'has', 'exhausted', 'all', 'legal', 'appeals', 'he', 'must', 'in', 'justice', 'to', 'his', 'implicit', 'promise', 'abide', 'by', 'the', 'laws', 'final', 'judgment', 'and', 'accept', 'his', 'death', 'sentence'] | as if recognize that loophole , Socrates also develop a celebrated early version of the social contract a ' contract ' between the law or the city and each citizen , not among the citizen -PRON- with the argument that now , after -PRON- be condemn by an athenian court and have exhaust all legal appeal , -PRON- must , in justice to -PRON- implicit promise , abide by the law ' final judgment and accept -PRON- death sentence . |