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Alphabetical [« »] begins 12 behalf 2 behoof 1 being 51 belief 2 believe 10 believed 4 | Frequency [« »] 53 then 52 ventricles 52 were 51 being 51 had 50 parts 50 pulse | William Harvey On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals IntraText - Concordances being |
Chapter
1 Int | close of the Civil War, being present at the battle of 2 Pref| in one particular, this being conceived to depend on the 3 Pref| almost identical, there being the same apparatus of fibres, 4 Pref| arteriosa or pulmonary artery being of greater capacity than 5 Pref| when the lungs labour from being either greatly oppressed 6 II | elongated.~3. The heart being grasped in the hand, is 7 III | greater portion of the blood being diverted into the tumour 8 IV | finally, all the other parts being at rest and dead, as Galen 9 IV | dilatation of the heart, but by being thrown into them by the 10 IV | the right auricle, this being apparent so long as it was 11 IV | third month, the heart then being whitish and bloodless, although 12 IV | discharged, the incision being made in the upper aspect 13 IV | our view, but the heart being perceived as though it had 14 IV | visible and invisible, betwixt being and not being, as it were, 15 IV | invisible, betwixt being and not being, as it were, it gave by 16 V | into the ventricle, which, being filled, the heart raises 17 V | firearms, where, the trigger being touched, down comes the 18 V | dilated. Upon the mouthful being received, it is forced downwards 19 V | prepared and thrown open, and being once exposed, no further 20 VI | but a single ventricle, being devoid of lungs, the thing 21 VI | made out of two; and this being the case, I imagine that 22 VII | nothing to prevent it from being so, appears when we reflect 23 VII | corresponding with them, being always found to contain 24 VII | drawn in, the instrument being dilated, and forced out 25 VII | which are in the lungs, being driven inwardly, and powerfully 26 VII | through this great opening being prevented, when it is compressed 27 VIII| this not by reason of there being two sides of the body, as 28 IX | for confirmation, which, being stated, I conceive that 29 IX | in fact, collapsing, and being without any propelling power, 30 X | the blood pass, the body being entire and naturally constituted.~ 31 X | superior part; the vein being now seized either with forceps 32 X | become empty, the blood being exhausted by the action 33 X | impediment to the flow of blood being removed, instantly the colour 34 XI | afflux of nutriment and heat being prevented by the ligature, 35 XI | the best subject for it being one who is lean, and who 36 XI | applied. The veins again being compressed, nothing can 37 XI | they fill and swell, and being thus filled and distended, 38 XI | punctured; but the ligature being slackened, and the returning 39 XII | greatest part of the blood being abstracted, faintings and 40 XIII| continually smaller vessels, being separated from the mass 41 XIII| all such contrary motion, being so situated and arranged, 42 XIII| valve (O, G). The blood being thus pressed out and the 43 XIII| B. C.]~Farther, the arm being bound as before, and the 44 XIII| H, fig. 2, L, fig. 4), being removed, immediately the 45 XIII| has to be noted: The arm being bound, and the veins made 46 XIII| empty; but the finger at L being removed for an instant, 47 XV | warm, imbued with spirits, being sent out by the arteries, 48 XV | the quantity sent to each being according to the dimensions 49 XVI | symptoms, the genital organs being all the while unaffected; 50 XVII| best adapted to them as being of a doubtful nature, so 51 XVII| nearly of such strength, being three times thinner in its