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1 1| similarly also when anything moist becomes dry, or dry moist.
2 1| moist becomes dry, or dry moist.Now, the common term which
3 1| passive, the Dry and the Moist; Aristotle, in fact, was
4 1| more active, the Dry and Moist less so, he might perhaps
5 1| the flesh is obviously moist enough,- in factit is thoroughly
6 2| animal which is as red and moist [as blood is], for bone,
7 2| the Cold, the Dry and the Moist, the one pair being active
8 2| the Cold, the Dry and the Moist, and how he says that among
9 2| virtue of the Warm, Cold, Moist and Dry. And if one is speaking
10 2| well blended and moderately moist it generates blood; for
11 2| is a virtually warm and moist humour, and similarly also
12 2| the most part it appears moist. (For in them the apparently
13 2| has been called cold and moist; for about this also clear
14 2| is the well-known cold, moist humour which collects mostly
15 2| anything else than cold and moist. ~ If, then, there is a
16 2| then, there is a warm and moist humour, and another which
17 2| and yet another which is moist and cold, is there none
18 2| the Warm, Cold, Dry and Moist) and secondly, from obvious
19 2| vessels; now, this is thin, moist, and fluid, not like what
20 3| heat, which of course was moist, so that the word boil was
21 3| the Warm, Cold, Dry, and Moist are mixed, but on some other
22 3| the Warm, Cold, Dry and Moist; this Aristotle carried
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