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Alphabetical [« »] twinkling 2 twins 1 twisting 1 two 46 two-fold 1 two-for 1 tying 2 | Frequency [« »] 48 time 47 valves 47 vein 46 two 46 what 46 whole 45 both | William Harvey On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals IntraText - Concordances two |
Chapter
1 Pref| on the vital faculty; the two, in all other respects, 2 Pref| portion of an artery between two ligatures, and slit it open 3 IV | distinct in time and in place, two of which are proper to the 4 IV | proper to the auricles, two to the ventricles. With 5 IV | but not of time; for the two auricles move together, 6 IV | together, and so also do the two ventricles, in such wise 7 IV | four, the times are only two. And this occurs in the 8 IV | There are, as it were, two motions going on together: 9 IV | short pause between these two motions, so that the heart 10 IV | sometimes seen to reply, after two or three contractions of 11 IV | ventricle, there are always two auricles present, but not 12 V | the body at large.~These two motions, one of the ventricles, 13 V | preserved between them, the two concurring in such wise 14 VI | one ventricle made out of two; and this being the case, 15 VI | ventricle than there are with two, it is open to us to conclude, 16 VI | that vessel divides into two branches after its escape 17 VI | heart. It is as if to the two trunks already mentioned 18 VI | the embryo, as it were, two aortas, or two roots of 19 VI | it were, two aortas, or two roots of the great artery, 20 VI | said in regard to these two great communications, to 21 VI | present, nature uses the two ventricles of the heart 22 VI | as if in the adult the two ventricles were made to 23 VII | again within an hour or two by the bladder. Such a quantity 24 VII | are four orifices in all, two in either ventricle, one 25 VII | with four sets of valves, two serving for the induction 26 VII | serving for the induction and two for the eduction of the 27 VIII| transport the blood, they are of two kinds, the cava and the 28 VIII| by reason of there being two sides of the body, as Aristotle 29 IX | when distended, to be, say, two ounces, three ounces, or 30 IX | found it to hold upwards of two ounces. Let us assume further 31 IX | beats, in some as many as two, three, and even four thousand. 32 IX | expelled; if with each stroke two drachms are expelled, the 33 X | more in a day, and a woman two or three pints whilst nursing 34 X | the course of an hour or two.~And if not yet convinced, 35 X | then we have evidence of two kinds of death: extinction 36 XI | either an anastomosis of the two orders of vessels, or porosities 37 XIII| there are for the most part two together -regard each other, 38 XIII| and roots. In many places two valves are so placed and 39 XVI | Nor indeed can we imagine two contrary motions in any 40 XVI | or medium compound of the two, precisely as happens when 41 XVI | egg there are, as it were, two umbilical vessels, one from 42 XVI | mingling together these two kinds of juices, difficult 43 XVII| has lungs has, therefore, two ventricles to its heart-one 44 XVII| a difference between the two ventricles. There, as in 45 XVII| other things between the two ventricles begins to be 46 XVII| and the testicles, the two orders of vessels are so