Book
1 1| of pigs, fill them with air, and then rubthem on ashes
2 1| distended,they again blow air into it and expand it further;
3 1| consensusin the movements of air and fluid throughout the
4 1| dispersed into the surrounding air; otherwise theywill certainly
5 1| one fills it with water or air and thenties up its neck
6 1| concordancein the movements of air and fluid, and that everything
7 1| still disperses into the air, particularlyif this be
8 1| particles carried in the air." Then do you ventureto
9 1| the rarefied partof the air surrounding us (particularly
10 1| towardsthe rarefied part [of the air]," and when it was impossible
11 2| and are emptied of the air which they contain in their
12 2| those who maintain that the air is forced along by contraction.
13 3| becomes slightly filled with air which is swallowed along
14 3| coat is contracting, this air is easily forced with the
15 3| exists an inner coat, the air impedes the conveyance of
16 3| consensus in the movement of air and fluids. And I do not
17 3| trachea-artery alternately draws air into the lungs and gives
18 3| or paradoxical that the air is dismissed through the
19 3| the skin draw in the outer air when they dilate, while
20 3| the skin draw in the outer air (this being near them and
21 3| water and sand, and suck the air out of the tube with your
22 3| appropriateness of quality; air is drawn into bellows in
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