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Alphabetical    [«  »]
partly 1
partridge 1
parts 50
pass 26
passage 22
passages 10
passed 8
Frequency    [«  »]
26 heat
26 his
26 nothing
26 pass
26 use
26 without
25 auricle
William Harvey
On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals

IntraText - Concordances

pass

   Chapter
1 Pref| and fuliginous vapours can pass hither and thither without 2 V | Even so does it come to pass with the motions and action 3 VI | way by which the blood may pass from the veins into the 4 VI | the blood must constantly pass by this foramen from the 5 VII | swallow drinks by the gallon, pass all off again within an 6 VII | the concoction: it must pass through the liver (it is 7 VII | juices of the food we consume pass twice through this organ 8 VII | whole mass of the blood, may pass through the substance of 9 VII | that could never come to pass were the blood at liberty 10 VII | cannot do otherwise than pass through continuously. And 11 VII | blood can do otherwise than pass continually from the vena 12 VIII| similarly does it come to pass in the body, through the 13 IX | whole must very quickly pass through the organ; second, 14 X | that a large quantity may pass through and yet no necessity 15 X | quantity of blood cannot pass in so short a space of time 16 X | quantity must the blood pass, the body being entire and 17 XI | tumours. But it has come to pass, from no one having duly 18 XI | and with force, but cannot pass out again.~Now is not this 19 XII | through one arm, or how many pass in twenty or thirty pulsations 20 XIII| if anything attempts to pass from the trunks into the 21 XIII| accord, as it would have to pass from larger into continually 22 XIII| instituted lest the blood should pass from the greater into the 23 XIII| veins: if I attempted to pass a probe from the trunk of 24 XIII| the arms, not a drop can pass; all motion of the blood, 25 XVI | rendered thick. It does not pass through them, (as I have 26 XVII| longitudinally; and so it comes to pass that when all the fibres


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