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Alphabetical    [«  »]
wondering 1
wonders 1
wont 4
wood 33
wooden 3
woods 4
wool 5
Frequency    [«  »]
33 opinion
33 solid
33 strong
33 wood
32 away
32 concerning
32 similar
Francis Bacon
The new Organon

IntraText - Concordances

wood

   Book, Aphorism
1 1, LXXXVIII| of consistency, which in wood or stone is not observed, 2 1, XI | rubbed violently, as stone, wood, cloth, etc., insomuch that 3 1, XII | nearest seems to be rotten wood, which shines by night and 4 1, XII | made of spirit of wine on wood, and also on butter, wax, 5 1, XIII | metal, sulphur, fossil, wood, water, or carcass of animal 6 1, XIII | differ in degree of cold, wood not being equally cold with 7 1, XIII | touch; no more does rotten wood, which shines in the dark. 8 1, XIII | fire or burn the driest wood or straw, or even tinder, 9 1, XIII | perhaps comes flame from wood, especially such as contains 10 1, XIII | flame from small pieces of wood (such as are commonly tied 11 1, XIII | After this comes ignited wood or coal, and also bricks 12 1, XIII | and the like; then comes wood; then water; and lastly 13 1, XX | appears likewise in all wood and combustibles, from which 14 1, XXV | does not attract lead, nor wood wood, nor water water. Now 15 1, XXV | not attract lead, nor wood wood, nor water water. Now a 16 1, XXV | between the two pieces of wood; although this property 17 1, XXV | previously been latent in the wood. In like manner, although 18 1, XXVII | substances; for example, in wood or stone, when it is burned 19 1, XL | place. For the parts of wood split asunder and are contracted; 20 1, XLII | silver, nor stone, nor glass, wood, water, oil, cloth or fibrous 21 1, XLIII | through the holes and pores of wood and water, and are moreover 22 1, XLV | compact bodies, such as wood, stones and metals, is still 23 1, XLV | apparent in the bending of wood or metal, in clocks moving 24 1, XLVIII | variety of solid substance, as wood, iron, lead, cloth, parchment, 25 1, XLVIII | the density of water, or wood to the density of stone, 26 1, XLVIII | or stone to the rarity of wood, there would be no need 27 1, XLVIII | having their points also of wood, which penetrate more deeply 28 1, XLVIII | penetrate more deeply into wood than if they were tipped 29 1, XLVIII | substance, the torpor of the wood being shaken off by the 30 1, XLVIII | from some porous body (as wood, bone, parchment, and the 31 1, XLVIII | the rude mass of stone or wood educes, by separation and 32 1, L | loss of quantity in the wood through the lapse of time, 33 1, L | into waters which petrify wood; by burying them in the


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