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Isocrates

[ ahy-sok-ruh-teez ]

noun

  1. 436鈥338 b.c., Athenian orator.


Isocrates

/ 补瑟藞蝉蓲办谤蓹藢迟颈藧锄 /

noun

  1. Isocrates436 bc338 bcMGreekAthenianPHILOSOPHY: rhetoricianEDUCATION: teacher 436鈥338 bc , Athenian rhetorician and teacher
鈥淐ollins English Dictionary 鈥 Complete & Unabridged鈥 2012 Digital Edition 漏 William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 漏 HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

As it happened, a brilliant young student in Plato鈥檚 school wrote a short work in response to Isocrates鈥 criticisms: the Protrepticus, a text that became famous in antiquity.

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Candidates for higher education would be expected to have tracts of Cicero, Virgil, Isocrates, and Homer by heart.

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And it is paralleled by Isocrates, a contemporary of Plato, in those words spoken by the King Nicocles when addressing his governors, 鈥淵ou should be to others what you think I should be to you.鈥

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His style is the very opposite of that of Isocrates and the rhetoricians.

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The only good authorities as to this point are the orators Lycurgus and Isocrates, who mention the law prescribing the recitation, but do not say when or by whom it was enacted.

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