Associations to the word «Locke»
Noun
- Descartes
- Rousseau
- Hume
- Kant
- Alain
- Kimberley
- Voltaire
- Treatise
- Liberalism
- Eastwood
- Sumner
- Alton
- Thinker
- Hurley
- Enlightenment
- Hegel
- Philosopher
- Bacon
- Gottfried
- Sawyer
- Boone
- Newton
- Elsie
- Eva
- Essay
- Aquinas
- Stephenson
- Idealism
- Quinn
- Paine
- Boyle
- Aristotle
- Leroy
- Plato
- Latham
- Skepticism
- Emissary
- Kimberly
- Lambert
- Berkeley
- Theorist
- Desmond
- Harlem
- Cor
- Philosophy
- Automaton
- Austen
- Vince
- Milton
- Kingsley
- Gary
- Eighteenth
- Clint
- Josef
- Jacques
- Terry
- Whig
- Ollie
- John
- Marx
- Flashback
- Isaac
- Dryden
- Materialism
- Elliott
- Ashley
- Bosch
- Unitarian
- Liberty
- Puritan
- Sidney
- Galileo
- Jefferson
- Matthew
- Renaissance
- Legitimacy
- Slate
- Freighter
- Brent
- Rowan
- Coleridge
- Cicero
- Sensation
- Addison
- Critique
- Fullback
- Lilly
- Rutherford
Adjective
Verb
Wiktionary
LOCKE, proper noun. An English surname.
LOCKE, proper noun. John Locke (1632 – 1704); an influential English philosopher of the Enlightenment and social contract theorist.
LOCKE, noun. Archaic spelling of lock.
Dictionary definition
LOCKE, noun. English empiricist philosopher who believed that all knowledge is derived from sensory experience (1632-1704).
Wise words
It is better wither to be silent, or to say things of more
value than silence. Sooner throw a pearl at hazard than an
idle or useless word; and do not say a little in many words,
but a great deal in a few.