Book
1 1| cannot occur without the nutriment whichflows to the part and
2 1| of the bodyin the form of nutriment is being worked up into
3 1| with the disposal of the nutriment, as also their faculties,
4 1| organs for altering the nutriment.For in order that the yellow
5 1| with alteration prepare the nutriment suitable for each part;others
6 1| condition. While, however, the nutriment conveyedto the part does
7 1| there is adhesion of the nutriment but no real assimilation.
8 1| Strictly speaking, then, nutriment is that which is actually
9 1| is not, strictly speaking,nutriment, but is so called only by
10 1| properlyelaborated, has been called "nutriment." Similarly we call the
11 1| the variouskinds of food "nutriment," not because they are already
12 1| Hippocrates said, viz., "Nutriment is what is engagedin nourishing,
13 1| and what is destined tobe nutriment." For to that which is already
14 1| assimilated he gavethe name of nutriment; to the similar material
15 1| animalsthe dispersal of nutriment and the discharge of waste
16 1| about the absorption of nutriment would be considereda fool. ~ ~
17 1| again. And the dispersalof nutriment [anadosis] need not make
18 1| for example, as the of nutriment by the stomach whichoccurs
19 2| concerning the delivery of nutriment from the food-canal which
20 2| the body, if delivery of nutriment resulted merely from the
21 2| after the liver draws the nutriment into its right ventricle,
22 2| a transmutation of the nutriment into the proper quality
23 2| the result is that, of the nutriment carried up from the alimentary
24 2| proclivity for attracting nutriment. For how could the nerve,
25 2| required to imagine the nutriment introduced, not into this
26 2| an abundant delivery of nutriment? And if he calls the conveyance
27 2| the adjacent vessels, the nutriment being attracted through
28 2| What does this say? "The nutriment being attracted through
29 2| demonstrated that when the nutriment becomes altered in the veins
30 2| blood, everything in the nutriment which belongs naturally
31 2| other hand, that part of the nutriment which is roasted, so to
32 3| being nourished makes into nutriment for itself is ensured by
33 3| the actual bringing up of nutriment from the veins into each
34 3| while all will subdue the nutriment which is proper to the animal,
35 3| latter alteration changes the nutriment into the substance of blood,
36 3| can it be that, while the nutriment does undergo an alteration
37 3| digestion means and since the nutriment has been shown to take on
38 3| demonstrated adequately that nutriment does undergo digestion in
39 3| either of this attracted nutriment as a whole, or even of any
40 3| liver during absorption of nutriment. To disbelieve such things
41 3| when there is abundance of nutriment contained in the food-canal,
42 3| is empty and in need of nutriment, this is again attracted
43 3| For when there is much nutriment contained in the alimentary
44 3| stomach easily attracts nutriment from the liver when it [
45 3| sometimes the surplusage of nutriment in the liver is a reason
46 3| latter too is in want of nutriment. ~ Now, just as the parts
47 3| is nothing surprising in nutriment coming from the liver to
48 3| excess-matter, but actual nutriment is brought down from the
49 3| you think it strange that nutriment should at once be yielded
50 3| one time the liver draws nutriment from the stomach, and at
51 3| organs draws into itself the nutriment alongside it, and devours
52 3| thoroughly satisfied; this nutriment, as I have already shown,
53 3| nourished, it too envelops its nutriment and clasps it all round
54 3| during this time, while the nutriment is passing along the whole
55 3| in the first period the nutriment remains in the stomach and
56 3| adhesion of the portions of nutriment presented. And if the stomach
57 3| this time, it will draw its nutriment the from the veins in the
58 3| some of its appropriate nutriment from the stomach. ~ For,
59 3| of from the thick heavy nutriment contained in the intestines
|