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| Alphabetical [« »] watch 1 water 174 watering 1 waters 28 waterspouts 2 watery 6 waves 2 | Frequency [« »] 28 simply 28 three 28 virtues 28 waters 27 already 27 could 27 having | Francis Bacon The new Organon IntraText - Concordances waters |
Book, Aphorism
1 1, XI | first dissolved by strong waters in glass, and that without 2 1, XII | by conflict, the strong waters penetrating, digging into, 3 1, XII | 24th.~28. Liquids, whether waters or oils, which possess a 4 1, XX | of this, that all strong waters (if suited to the body on 5 1, XXXV | if it be found that the waters themselves are carried in 6 1, XXXVI | advance and retreat of the waters, as water shaken in a basin 7 1, XXXVI | else by a lifting up of the waters from the bottom and falling 8 1, XXXVI | progressive motion. For waters may move in progression, 9 1, XXXVI | progression, namely, of the waters entering the mouth of the 10 1, XXXVI | happen in a like manner that waters coming in a vast mass from 11 1, XXXVI | speed) of the earth and waters of the sea, the waters are 12 1, XXXVI | and waters of the sea, the waters are violently driven upwards 13 1, XXXVI | the motion by which the waters rise in the flood and sink 14 1, XXXVI | without any accession of other waters rolling in, must necessarily 15 1, XXXVI | mass of water, but the same waters (without increase of quantity) 16 1, XXXVI | extension, but the same waters (the same in quantity as 17 1, XXXVI | place it is evident that the waters, as they lie in the trench 18 1, XXXVI | vacuum. It remains that the waters must be raised in one part, 19 1, XXXVI | more arched and round, the waters rising in the middle of 20 1, XXXVI | more even and level, the waters returning to their former 21 1, XXXVI | if this be the case, the waters must (contrary to the common 22 1, XLV | globe of the moon and the waters of the sea (as seems highly 23 1, XLVII | fast; its parts fall. The waters in seas ebb and flow; but 24 1, XLVIII| of corrosives and strong waters which open for themselves 25 1, XLVIII| For if the moon raises the waters, or makes moist things swell; 26 1, XLVIII| communicate itself to the air and waters. The motion of rotation 27 1, L | metals; by plunging them into waters which petrify wood; by burying 28 1, L | greatly exalted, as in strong waters and other chemical oils;