| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] sort 3 sorts 3 sought 2 sound 44 source 1 space 8 spaces 1 | Frequency [« »] 46 piece 46 very 45 can 44 sound 43 an 43 up 42 thus | Hippocrates On the Articulations IntraText - Concordances sound |
Part
1 3 | the patient to hold the sound shoulder, so that the body 2 10| the arms and the legs, the sound should always be compared 3 10| and the unsound with the sound, not paying regard to the 4 10| to ascertain whether the sound joint be unlike the unsound. 5 10| the same positions as the sound body can be put into; one 6 10| armpit than it is in the sound joint; and also, above, 7 10| the ear, as they can the sound arm, nor move it about as 8 12| will not increase like the sound one, for although it does 9 12| efficiently than with the sound arm. But in those who have 10 16| laid on the acromion of the sound side. If the patient has 11 33| patient should lie upon the sound side of the jaw, not resting 12 40| more harm, for even the sound ear, when confined with 13 50| the part be made up with sound flesh, and the flesh adhere 14 51| from ignorance, bring the sound leg to it and not it to 15 51| to it and not it to the sound leg; on this account, the 16 51| be much longer than the sound one, and in many other cases 17 51| admit of flexion as in the sound limb, and the head of the 18 52| mostly supported on the sound leg, and the limb at the 19 52| hollow and bent, while on the sound side the buttock is necessarily 20 52| walk with the foot of the sound leg turned outward, the 21 52| not outward, for thus the sound leg best supports its own 22 52| staff at the side of the sound leg. For they require the 23 52| can most quickly turn the sound limb under the body, by 24 52| unsound limb outward, and the sound inward. In the case we are 25 52| crawl about miserably on the sound leg, supporting themselves 26 52| themselves with the hand of the sound side resting on the ground. 27 52| instructed, stand erect upon the sound leg, but carry about a staff, 28 52| under the armpit of the sound side, and some use a staff 29 52| they in walking, and their sound leg is no less strong than 30 52| strong than when both are sound. The fleshy parts of the 31 53| becomes shorter than the sound one; but the growth of the 32 53| no means so fleshy as the sound limb. The following observations 33 53| inferior in size to the sound, for the reasons which have 34 53| other hand than with the sound; for the arms do not support 35 54| admit of flexion like the sound limb. These, then, are the 36 55| not usually grow like the sound one, the bones, too, of 37 55| wasted than those of the sound limb, but this is much less 38 58| have the least atrophy. The sound leg, however, is not benefited, 39 58| rests upon a staff, the sound leg thereby gains strength, 40 60| walking than they do the sound one. And sometimes they 41 60| persons whose limbs are sound, the greater the steps they 42 73| in the posts, then if the sound leg were carried through 43 78| seated upon it, and then the sound leg is to be gently stretched 44 78| some one is to hold the sound leg so that he may not fall