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Alphabetical [« »] angelfish 3 anger 2 angle 2 animal 263 animalculae 1 animalcule 1 animalcules 6 | Frequency [« »] 279 male 269 young 268 into 263 animal 255 part 252 an 251 eggs | Aristotle The History of Animals IntraText - Concordances animal |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | wolf: for, by the way, an animal is highbred if it come from 2 I, 1 | from a noble stock, and an animal is thorough-bred if it does 3 I, 2 | residuum. In other words, an animal has a bowel or intestine 4 I, 2 | it have a bladder; but an animal may have a bowel and be 5 I, 4 | 4~Every animal is supplied with moisture, 6 I, 4 | with moisture, and, if the animal be deprived of the same 7 I, 4 | death ensues: further, every animal has another part in which 8 I, 5 | conception out of which the animal that is to be develops, 9 I, 5 | which in its entirety the animal in its entirety develops, 10 I, 6 | position to a scale.~An animal that is blooded and capable 11 I, 6 | And, of course, man is the animal with which we are all of 12 I, 11 | of the head, whereby an animal hears, a part incapable 13 I, 11 | long and strong, and the animal uses it like a hand; for 14 I, 15 | another than in any other animal.~Of the senses man has the 15 I, 15 | touch more refined than any animal, and so also, but in less 16 I, 16 | taking size for size of animal, the largest brain, and 17 I, 17 | of the seal. This latter animal has kidneys resembling in 18 II, 1 | but, when dissected, the animal is found in all internal 19 II, 1 | the elephant. This latter animal has its toes somewhat indistinctly 20 II, 1 | narrow. Moreover, no other animal but man has breasts in front; 21 II, 1 | his legs frontwards. No animal bends both its fore-limbs 22 II, 1 | action so called is when the animal never overpasses the right 23 II, 1 | distinctive properties by and by animal~All viviparous quadrupeds 24 II, 1 | is hairier than any other animal. Further, of hair-coated 25 II, 1 | and on the pubes. No other animal has hair in either of these 26 II, 1 | on its withers, and the animal called pardion, in either 27 II, 1 | has no horns. This latter animal resembles the stag in size; 28 II, 1 | bear; so that, when the animal goes to war, they protect 29 II, 1 | goat; and a solid-hooved animal with a pair of horns has 30 II, 1 | oxen. The deer is the only animal that sheds its horns, and 31 II, 1 | compared with the size of the animal it is disproportionately 32 II, 1 | sharp-pointed ones in the other. No animal is there that possesses 33 II, 1 | structures exist in any animal possessed of "saw-teeth". 34 II, 1 | almost all saw-toothed.~No animal of these genera is provided 35 II, 1 | teeth. There is, however, an animal of the sort, if we are to 36 II, 1 | there is no instance of an animal that sheds its molars. The 37 II, 8 | for these reasons the animal is oftener to be found on 38 II, 10 | no terrestrial blooded animal is oviparous unless it is 39 II, 10 | Egyptian crocodile.~This latter animal, by the way, resembles certain 40 II, 11 | vision, through which the animal sees, for it never covers 41 II, 11 | those found in any other animal. After being cut open along 42 II, 15 | organ, as is also every animal furnished with gills. All 43 II, 15 | refuse to eat it unless the animal is exceptionally fat. With 44 II, 15 | gall-bladder, but when the animal is cut in the region where 45 II, 16 | no instance known of an animal, whether fish or bird, provided 46 II, 16 | the other organs of the animal. In the turtle the kidney 47 II, 17 | Bolbe, and elsewhere, which animal might be taken to have two 48 II, 17 | caeca) to the gut, but no animal that has not incisors in 49 II, 17 | so constructed that the animal appears to have four stomachs; 50 II, 17 | narrowness and length of the animal, the viscera are correspondingly 51 III, 1 | varies accordingly as the animal is emprosthuretic or opisthuretic.~ 52 III, 1 | whatever: nor, in short, any animal devoid of feet, save such 53 III, 7 | river crocodile is the only animal that moves the upper one.) 54 III, 7 | the others do not; for no animal has bone in the region of 55 III, 7 | that in one and the same animal certain bones are supplied 56 III, 9 | according as the skin of an animal is black, or white, or of 57 III, 9 | And, whereas no other animal is known to shed its horns, 58 III, 11 | after the maturity of the animal; but this occurs in man 59 III, 12 | countries the same species of animal is found white in one district 60 III, 12 | or dasypod, is the only animal known to have hair inside 61 III, 15 | tortoise is the only oviparous animal that is furnished therewithal. 62 III, 16 | flesh is abundant in an animal, its veins are somewhat 63 III, 17 | especially the sheep; for this animal is apt to die from its kidneys 64 III, 19 | sensitive to touch in any animal, any more than the excretions 65 III, 19 | lacerated, blood exudes, if the animal be alive and unless the 66 III, 19 | very thin. In the living animal it is always liquid and 67 III, 19 | of it, and the fatter an animal gets the less becomes its 68 III, 20 | animals in pregnancy. When the animal is pregnant milk is found, 69 III, 20 | male of man or of any other animal, though from time to time 70 III, 20 | the Lemnian owner of the animal inquired of the oracle, 71 III, 20 | found in the stomach of the animal while it is yet suckling.~ 72 III, 21 | the natural heat of the animal, as the milk is concocted. 73 III, 21 | varies with the size of the animal and the diversities of pasturage. 74 III, 22 | more sperm than any other animal. In hairy-coated animals 75 IV, 1 | term "mollusc" we mean an animal that, being devoid of blood, 76 IV, 1 | black liquid peculiar to the animal.~Stretching out its feet, 77 IV, 1 | at full tension; if the animal get on to the sand it can 78 IV, 1 | the black juice, and the animal has the vesicle and the 79 IV, 1 | the head, which, if the animal grows old, becomes hard.~ 80 IV, 2 | numerous. These organs the animal keeps in perpetual motion; 81 IV, 2 | and terminates where the animal discharges the residuum, 82 IV, 4 | words, it is inside the animal, and the shell is outside, 83 IV, 4 | the same way; and, if the animal be alarmed, the head draws 84 IV, 4 | side of the head, where the animal discharges its residuum; 85 IV, 4 | neritae.~And, by the way, the animal found in the shell of the 86 IV, 4 | shell. The interior of the animal is fleshy, and the mouth 87 IV, 5 | another; in point of fact, the animal is in a manner divided up 88 IV, 6 | or poppy-juice). If the animal be opened, it is found to 89 IV, 8 | case of the mole. For this animal is deprived of sight; it 90 IV, 8 | of smell; for whenever an animal is attracted to a thing 91 IV, 8 | of the iron rod (for the animal, be it observed, juts a 92 IV, 8 | firm impression that the animal can smell and hear; and 93 IV, 9 | sound. The fact is that no animal can give utterance to voice 94 IV, 9 | becomes transparent, and the animal’s eyes shine through the 95 IV, 10 | is quite obvious that the animal is sleeping, from its movements 96 IV, 11 | attachments. For no eel nor animal of this kind is ever viviparous 97 v, 1 | never reproduced, nor is any animal produced at all, but the 98 v, 7 | quadrupeds, when the one animal turns up its tail and the 99 v, 7 | protrusion of a member from one animal into the other.~ 100 v, 8 | year and the age of the animal.~Animals in general seem 101 v, 10 | seasons, as the muraena. This animal lays a great number of eggs 102 v, 10 | of the pine-tree, and the animal has teeth inside and out. 103 v, 12 | And the two sexes of this animal go about in pairs, side 104 v, 12 | edible urchin; for this animal has the so-called eggs in 105 v, 14 | the male, and the young animal than the elder; for, by 106 v, 14 | she is at her prime. The animal, as it grows old, continues 107 v, 14 | years; and only one young animal is produced at a time, in 108 v, 15 | burrows. The bloom of the animal is situated between the 109 v, 15 | anxious always to break the animal in pieces while it is yet 110 v, 15 | so that very often the animal got dropped off in the pulling 111 v, 15 | a basket, so that if the animal fall off it is not lost. 112 v, 15 | off it is not lost. The animal is more inclined to slip 113 v, 15 | congenital with the larger animal. (Scallops burrow for a 114 v, 15 | suddenly taken away from the animal, to have undergone a process 115 v, 16 | through these pores that the animal takes its food.~There is 116 v, 17 | the end flap on them the animal can close up all, and this 117 v, 17 | receptive of the eggs; for the animal lays its eggs into these 118 v, 17 | an inch, in length. The animal, then, lays its eggs before 119 v, 18 | vessel much larger than the animal’s body in which they were 120 v, 19 | from the grub, the young animal does not grow out of a mere 121 v, 19 | portion of it, as a young animal grows from a portion only 122 v, 19 | grub entire grows and the animal becomes differentiated out 123 v, 19 | excrement yet within the living animal, like the helminthes or 124 v, 19 | piled on day after day, an animal is engendered in the fire, 125 v, 26 | is completed, the parent animal, as happens with the parent 126 v, 31 | matter; and, if you prick an animal when in this condition at 127 v, 31 | the flea peculiar to the animal, the Cynoroestes. In all 128 v, 33 | in fact, the life of the animal is said not to exceed six 129 v, 33 | disproportion is more marked in this animal than in any other between 130 v, 33 | huge size of the full-grown animal. For the egg is not larger 131 v, 33 | size, but the full-grown animal attains the length of twenty-six 132 v, 33 | actually stated that the animal goes on growing to the end 133 VI, 12 | The seal is an amphibious animal: that is to say, it cannot 134 VI, 12 | to the shore-as being an animal furnished with feet; it 135 VI, 18 | the particular kinds of animal and partly to all in general. 136 VI, 18 | from the habits of this one animal serves as a term of abuse 137 VI, 19 | appoint no bell-wether, as the animal is not capable of repose 138 VI, 20 | the female of any other animal excepting the sow and the 139 VI, 20 | they do so, fancy that the animal sheds no teeth at all; others, 140 VI, 21 | horse sheds his. When the animal suffers from podagra it 141 VI, 22 | in another six years the animal reaches its full bulk, and 142 VI, 25 | goes back to its place, the animal is young; if it remains 143 VI, 25 | remains long wrinkled up, the animal is old.~ 144 VI, 26 | mother when a year old. The animal lives for a long period, 145 VI, 29 | concerning the longevity of the animal, but the stories have never 146 VI, 29 | they turn to pasture. The animal acts in this way owing to 147 VI, 29 | that, if you strike the animal ever so softly, it is apt 148 VI, 29 | though the hide of the animal remains sound and uninjured.~ 149 VI, 30 | parturition resembles this animal. When a she-bear is with 150 VI, 31 | for the scarcity of the animal; for the animal is, as is 151 VI, 31 | scarcity of the animal; for the animal is, as is well known, a 152 VI, 31 | as is well known, a rare animal, and is not found in many 153 VI, 33 | has been stated, for the animal is opisthuretic. They breed 154 VI, 35 | the dog; the cubs of the animal are born blind, and the 155 VI, 36 | of Pharnabazus, and the animal is there still. The number 156 VI, 37 | prolific qualities of the animal and the rapidity of its 157 VII, 2 | seminal fluid than any other animal (for which reason man is 158 VII, 4 | as the hare. Unlike that animal, the mare after once conceiving 159 VII, 7 | it. And first of all the animal develops within the innermost 160 VIII, 1 | of this quality, and an animal has more or less of some 161 VIII, 1 | for the time being from an animal; so that one is quite justified 162 VIII, 1 | from things lifeless to animal life in such a way that 163 VIII, 1 | life as compared with an animal, is endowed with life as 164 VIII, 1 | scale of ascent towards the animal. So, in the sea, there are 165 VIII, 1 | determine whether they be animal or vegetable. For instance, 166 VIII, 1 | so throughout the entire animal scale there is a graduated 167 VIII, 2 | applicable. There is no animal taking in water that is 168 VIII, 2 | hardly allow that such an animal is terrestrial and terrestrial 169 VIII, 2 | by terrestrial we mean an animal that inhales air, and if 170 VIII, 2 | if by aquatic we mean an animal that takes in water. For 171 VIII, 2 | furthermore, when sleeping, the animal keeps his nose above water, 172 VIII, 2 | there. At present only one animal of the latter kind is known, 173 VIII, 2 | only a minute organ of the animal is mutilated, and the creature 174 VIII, 2 | one way or the other, the animal will in one case turn to 175 VIII, 2 | obliterated altogether, the animal will be of neither one sex 176 VIII, 2 | it comes to pass that one animal is terrestrial and another 177 VIII, 2 | nature is to every single animal pleasant and agreeable.~ 178 VIII, 2 | and the mode of life of an animal corresponds to the category 179 VIII, 2 | to say, in some cases the animal depends for its terrestrial 180 VIII, 2 | duct is at the top of the animal. In other words, the sea-anemone 181 VIII, 2 | than its match. Thus, this animal is so overmastered and cowed 182 VIII, 3 | them rear their young on animal food, with the sole exception 183 VIII, 3 | crow also feeds on such animal life as is cast up on the 184 VIII, 3 | Birds of prey feed on any animal or bird, other than a bird 185 VIII, 4 | and whenever they catch an animal they extract all its juices 186 VIII, 5 | the wolf, but of no other animal, that in extremity of hunger 187 VIII, 5 | that goes with a pack.~The animal called "glanus" by some 188 VIII, 5 | its back in front of the animal, and, when the bull proceeds 189 VIII, 5 | breathing on it, and when the animal is cut open an overpowering 190 VIII, 6 | its size than any other animal; in fact, a pig can be fattened 191 VIII, 6 | having first weighed the animal while it was being starved. 192 VIII, 6 | starvation, pig-breeders feed the animal lavishly. Breeders in Thrace, 193 VIII, 12| coolness. The more weakly an animal is the greater hurry will 194 VIII, 17| that in consequence the animal on first emerging takes 195 VIII, 17| phenomenon would suppose the animal were going blind; after 196 VIII, 21| reaches the lungs, when the animal succumbs. The disease develops 197 VIII, 21| the moment it sets in the animal gives up eating. The swineherds 198 VIII, 21| three or four days. The animal is chiefly subject to branchos 199 VIII, 21| with blood, and further the animal will be unable to keep its 200 VIII, 21| much as possible, for this animal, like animals in general 201 VIII, 21| one kind of food blows the animal out, that another superinduces 202 VIII, 21| acorns, though liked by the animal, render the flesh flaccid. 203 VIII, 21| sow. The pig is the only animal known to be subject to measles.~ 204 VIII, 22| feet. Rabies drives the animal mad, and ary animal whatever, 205 VIII, 22| the animal mad, and ary animal whatever, excepting man, 206 VIII, 22| the dog itself, and to any animal it may bite, man excepted. 207 VIII, 23| from eruptions, but the animal recovers from the disease 208 VIII, 23| disinclination for food. The animal soon succumbs, and when 209 VIII, 24| Under this disease the animal trails its hind-legs under 210 VIII, 24| to castrate the male. The animal is subject also to tetanus: 211 VIII, 24| the head and neck, and the animal walks with its legs stretched 212 VIII, 24| heat of the breath; the animal may recover through the 213 VIII, 24| called nymphia, in which the animal is said to stand still and 214 VIII, 24| is there any cure if the animal swallow the grape-beetle, 215 VIII, 24| animals; it is given to the animal as a medicine in a solution 216 VIII, 24| afterwards will wallow in it. The animal is fond of water in every 217 VIII, 25| it stays in the head the animal may recover, but if it descends 218 VIII, 25| descends into the lungs the animal will die. Of all animals 219 VIII, 25| account for the fact that the animal is not found on the shores 220 VIII, 26| it will pass out if the animal takes a drink of olive-oil; 221 VIII, 26| drink of olive-oil; if the animal refuses olive-oil, they 222 VIII, 28| 28~Variety in animal life may be produced by 223 VIII, 28| locality: thus in one place an animal will not be found at all, 224 VIII, 29| regard to the bite of an animal. Thus, in Pharos and other 225 VIII, 29| made from the body of the animal, and is the only remedy 226 VIII, 29| creatures is when one venomous animal has bitten another; as, 227 VIII, 29| hairy-looking; whenever it bites an animal, the flesh all round the 228 IX, 1 | talons, attacks and maims the animal. And so the raven is at 229 IX, 1 | crooked talons, it kills the animal’s young. The raven and the 230 IX, 1 | raven comes and helps the animal. The vulture and the merlin 231 IX, 1 | to keep them quiet. The animal is hunted whether young 232 IX, 4 | accustomed herds, and if one animal strays away the rest will 233 IX, 4 | herdsmen lose one particular animal, they keep close watch on 234 IX, 5 | no man has ever seen the animal’s left horn; that the creature 235 IX, 5 | observation of them tell the animal’s age. But the patriarchs 236 IX, 5 | antlers), with which the animal meets attack, are technically 237 IX, 5 | reach their full size the animal basks in the sun, to mature 238 IX, 5 | the confederate. If the animal has its ears cocked, it 239 IX, 6 | boughs of a tree, to keep the animal from straying to any distance; 240 IX, 6 | straying to any distance; the animal meets its end in leaping 241 IX, 6 | they both prey on the same animal.~In regard to the instinct 242 IX, 30 | has sucked the teat of the animal, the teat dries up and the 243 IX, 30 | the teat dries up and the animal goes blind. It is dim-sighted 244 IX, 37 | baits. Accordingly, when the animal stirs up a place full of 245 IX, 37 | larger and larger as the animal grows larger, and that it 246 IX, 37 | for certain whether the animal can live when stripped of 247 IX, 39 | a third species of this animal, preeminently clever and 248 IX, 40 | any creature, or ever eats animal food. They have no fixed 249 IX, 41 | but for the most part on animal food. Some of the tame wasps 250 IX, 42 | but for the most part on animal food: for this reason they 251 IX, 44 | there are two species of the animal, and some say, three; there 252 IX, 44 | birds, and quadrupeds, this animal changes in appearance with 253 IX, 44 | in summer; in summer the animal is smooth-haired, in winter 254 IX, 45 | undercoat of woolly hair. The animal is not found either very 255 IX, 45 | to the eyes, so that the animal sees objects on either flank 256 IX, 45 | it. It is only when the animal is disturbed or alarmed 257 IX, 45 | this property; when the animal is undisturbed it has no 258 IX, 45 | shape and habits of the animal. When the season comes for 259 IX, 45 | rampart around them; for the animal has the faculty of ejecting 260 IX, 46 | rivers, but he is not a river animal; he can make his way through 261 IX, 46 | breathes through it. The animal is a poor swimmer owing 262 IX, 50 | unchanged in size, and the animal does not lose them. Calves 263 IX, 50 | following way: they turn the animal over on its back, cut a