hide Sorting

You can sort these results in two ways:

By entity
Chronological order for dates, alphabetical order for places and people.
By position (current method)
As the entities appear in the document.

You are currently sorting in descending order. Sort in ascending order.

hide Most Frequent Entities

The entities that appear most frequently in this document are shown below.

Entity Max. Freq Min. Freq
Ephesus (Turkey) 12 0 Browse Search
Greece (Greece) 12 0 Browse Search
Crete (Greece) 12 0 Browse Search
Lacedaemon (Greece) 10 0 Browse Search
Egypt (Egypt) 10 0 Browse Search
Asia 10 0 Browse Search
Elis (Greece) 8 0 Browse Search
Asia 8 0 Browse Search
Egypt (Egypt) 8 0 Browse Search
Plataea 6 0 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in a specific section of Plato, Menexenus. Search the whole document.

Found 1 total hit in 1 results.

for these are my two instructors, the one in music, the other in rhetoric. So it is not surprising that a man who is trained like me should be clever at speaking. But even a man less well taught than I, who had learnt his music from Lamprus and his rhetoric from Antiphon the Rhamnusian,Antiphon, born in 480 B.C., was the first of the ten great Attic Orators.—even such a one, I say, could none the less win credit by praising Athenians before an Athenian audience.MenexenusWhat, then, would you have to say, if you were required to speak?SocratesNothing, perhaps, myself of my own invention;