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Alphabetical [« »] fills 1 final 2 finally 13 find 23 finding 2 finds 1 fine 1 | Frequency [« »] 23 before 23 cause 23 each 23 find 23 flow 23 hand 23 up | William Harvey On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals IntraText - Concordances find |
Chapter
1 Pref| open lengthwise you will find nothing but blood"; and 2 Pref| train of reasoning: if we find the same blood in the arteries 3 Pref| ventricle; why, when we find similar structures in connexion 4 Pref| bronchia, wherefore do we find neither air nor fuliginous 5 Pref| pulmonary vein? Why do we always find this vessel full of sluggish 6 Pref| whilst in the lungs we find abundance of air remaining?~ 7 Pref| trachea securely, he will find, when he has laid open the 8 IV | in ovo, however, you will find at first no more a vesicle 9 IV | crayfish, etc., we only find a certain pulsating vesicle, 10 VI | their septum. We therefore find that in the greater number 11 VIII| the blood should somehow find its way from the arteries 12 IX | will now be surprised to find it empty, and the veins 13 IX | our dissections we usually find so large a quantity of blood 14 XI | on the contrary, do we find that the veins below, never 15 XIII| press downwards, you will find that you cannot force the 16 XIII| sigmoid valves which we find at the commencement of the 17 XIII| by one thousand, you will find that so much blood has passed 18 XIII| now believe that you will find yourself convinced of the 19 XVI | veins of an animal we do not find either chyme or chyle and 20 XVII| Dissection Unfolds)~I do not find the heart as a distinct 21 XVII| that I am astonished to find such diversity in this particular 22 XVII| under all circumstances, we find that the nearer the arteries 23 XVII| Why, in the same way, we find in the course of our anatomical