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Alphabetical    [«  »]
horse 5
horses 1
hostile 8
hot 43
hotness 1
hotter 6
hottest 8
Frequency    [«  »]
43 cause
43 effect
43 except
43 hot
43 manner
43 rest
42 better
Francis Bacon
The new Organon

IntraText - Concordances

hot

   Book, Aphorism
1 1, XVI | perceptions of the sense, as Hot, Cold, Black, White, do 2 1, XI | Liquids boiling or heated.~10. Hot vapors and fumes, and the 3 1, XI | toast.~25. Aromatic and hot herbs, as dracunculus, nasturtium 4 1, XI | little masticated, they feel hot and burning.~26. Strong 5 1, XII | comets are not found to be hot to the touch; indeed the 6 1, XII | unaccompanied by flame, is always hot; neither is there any negative 7 1, XII | and yet is not found to be hot; and the putrefying scales 8 1, XII | 9th.~15. In like manner to hot vapor I subjoin as a negative 9 1, XII | subjoin as a negative to hot air the nature of air itself. 10 1, XII | to the touch they are not hot at first. But their operation 11 1, XII | Spices and acrid herbs strike hot on the palate, and much 12 1, XII | and oil of vitriol, and in hot, as oil of marjoram and 13 1, XIII | to substances which are hot actually, and to the touch, 14 1, XIII | in its nature originally hot. For no stone, metal, sulphur, 15 1, XIII | of animal is found to be hot. And the hot water in baths 16 1, XIII | found to be hot. And the hot water in baths seems to 17 1, XIII | oil.~3. Substances once hot, as horse dung from animal 18 1, XIII | those substances which feel hot to the touch, seems to be 19 1, XIII | violent fevers they became so hot as somewhat to burn the 20 1, XIII | they become exceedingly hot, which is their condition 21 1, XIII | opinion fish are the least hot internally, and birds the 22 1, XIII | seed, eggs, are found to be hot only in a moderate degree, 23 1, XIII | moderate degree, and less hot than the outer flesh of 24 1, XIII | 31. An anvil grows very hot under the hammer, insomuch 25 1, XIII | 33. Approximation to a hot body increases heat in proportion 26 1, XIII | increases heat, unless the hot substances be mixed together. 27 1, XIII | continued application of a hot body increases heat, because 28 1, XIII | hour, or thereabouts, so hot that you cannot touch it.~ 29 1, XIII | heated by the approach of a hot body; which shows that all 30 1, XIII | insomuch that tepid water feels hot if the hand be cold, but 31 1, XIII | but cold if the hand be hot.~ 32 1, XVIII | approach to a fire, or other hot body, reject the distinctive 33 1, XVIII | the substance of another hot body.~5. On account of boiling 34 1, XX | of which a body becomes hot when a hot body is applied 35 1, XX | body becomes hot when a hot body is applied to it, be 36 1, XX | produced by the approach of a hot body, this does not proceed 37 1, XX | when slightly heated in hot ashes become flexible.~But 38 1, XXXIII| and go, but all flame is hot, so that heat is always 39 1, XXXVII| is rare and mobile, not hot or bright; the moon is bright 40 1, XXXVII| without heat; boiling water is hot without light; the motion 41 1, XL | bodies softened, as white hot iron; or they become fluid, 42 1, XL | phial on a chafing dish of hot coals. Presently the steam 43 1, L | of a vessel floating in hot water, of dung, of external


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