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Alphabetical [« »] partium 2 partly 1 partridge 1 parts 50 pass 26 passage 22 passages 10 | Frequency [« »] 52 were 51 being 51 had 50 parts 50 pulse 50 upon 49 would | William Harvey On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals IntraText - Concordances parts |
Chapter
1 Pref| the veins; and in extreme parts of the body where the arteries 2 Pref| dispensed to the several parts of the body. Yet it is denied 3 I | every one of the several parts of animals in a special 4 III | heart; the connexion of parts was obvious when the body 5 IV | finally, all the other parts being at rest and dead, 6 IV | cut in pieces the several parts may still be seen contracting 7 IV | distinctness, the external parts of the body presenting no 8 V | distributed by them to all parts of the body.~The above, 9 V | for distribution to all parts of the body. Or would he 10 VI | pretending to speak of the parts of animals generally, as 11 VII | case of a sponge, and of parts having a spongy structure, 12 VIII| particular, and of the other parts of the heart in general, 13 VIII| at large, and its several parts, in the same manner as it 14 VIII| blood, that the various parts are nourished, cherished, 15 VIII| to its contact with these parts, becomes cooled, coagulated, 16 IX | incessantly to the heart from parts and members of the body. 17 XI | in the limbs and extreme parts of the body the blood passes 18 XI | wit; and from the extreme parts back to the centre. Finally, 19 XI | through the veins to the parts above it, and maintains 20 XI | blood from the internal parts of the body to the parts 21 XI | parts of the body to the parts beyond the ligature. And 22 XI | contents into the superior parts, the hand at the same time 23 XI | porosities in the flesh and solid parts generally that are permeable 24 XI | the heart, by which the parts are of necessity filled, 25 XI | but in such wise only that parts are filled, not preternaturally 26 XI | oppressive redundancy in parts, that the access to them 27 XI | from superior to inferior parts; but as it is elsewhere 28 XII | veins; for it gets into the parts below the ligature through 29 XII | the mere nutrition of the parts.~It is still further to 30 XIII| veins in the peripheral parts and the body at large. We 31 XIII| external to the central parts; which done, I conceive 32 XIII| all flowing into inferior parts; for the edges of the valves 33 XIII| the extreme to the central parts of the body, the blood should 34 XIII| towards the more central parts, the valves, like the floodgates 35 XIII| inferior or more remote parts, and towards the heart, 36 XIV | for distribution to all parts of the body, where it makes 37 XV | life are dispensed to all parts as from a fountain head; 38 XV | for sent to the external parts of the body far from its 39 XV | the extreme and outward parts, and robbed of its spirits, 40 XV | in the pendent or lower parts of a corpse, becomes of 41 XV | its source. But how can parts attract in which the heat 42 XV | to almost all the other parts of the body; but if the 43 XV | proportion to the several parts of the body, the quantity 44 XV | source, to concentrate like parts to a whole, or the drops 45 XVI | the period when all the parts, like the heart itself in 46 XVII| nourishment into the extreme parts; for they have bodies which 47 XVII| of the variety of organic parts, or of the density of the 48 XVII| Respiration," and the "Parts of Animals," entitles nerves. 49 XVII| distinguished from the fleshy parts and movements take place, 50 XVII| ligamentous, whilst in extreme parts of the body, such as the