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Alphabetical    [«  »]
blink 2
blister-beetle 1
blistering 1
blood 124
blood-coloured 1
blood-red 1
blood-suckers 1
Frequency    [«  »]
128 great
128 instance
127 where
124 blood
123 head
122 days
122 take
Aristotle
The History of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

blood

    Book,  Paragraph
1 I, 1 | conditions, as, for instance, blood, serum, lard, suet, marrow, 2 I, 4 | contained. These parts are blood and vein, and in other animals 3 I, 4 | with animals supplied with blood, in the parts charged with 4 I, 4 | in the parts charged with blood. In other animals it has 5 I, 4 | to the parts charged with blood; but in all cases it is 6 I, 4 | animals are supplied with blood, as man, the horse, and 7 I, 5 | flying creatures possessed of blood have feathered wings or 8 I, 16 | sparingly supplied with blood, and is streaked all round 9 I, 17 | most richly supplied with blood; for the lung is throughout 10 I, 17 | out of which organs the blood had all escaped immediately 11 I, 17 | the heart alone contains blood. And the lung has blood 12 I, 17 | blood. And the lung has blood not in itself but in its 13 I, 17 | veins, but the heart has blood in itself; for in each of 14 I, 17 | its three cavities it has blood, but the thinnest blood 15 I, 17 | blood, but the thinnest blood is what it has in its central 16 I, 17 | fact that they contain no blood, nor is any clot found therein. 17 II, 11 | root of the tail. It has blood only round about the heart, 18 II, 11 | these there is but little blood after all. The brain is 19 II, 13 | exception are supplied with blood. Some of them are oviparous, 20 II, 15 | animals that are supplied with blood. For the principal genera 21 II, 15 | former are supplied with blood and the latter are not; 22 III, 1 | kidneys are supplied with blood, while the two from the 23 III, 1 | moist content qualified by blood, but to a comparatively 24 III, 2 | universally found is the blood, and its habitat the vein; 25 III, 2 | bile.~Now, as the nature of blood and the nature of the veins 26 III, 2 | collapse at once when the blood leaves them; for the blood 27 III, 2 | blood leaves them; for the blood pours out of them in a stream, 28 III, 2 | vessel, since there is no blood separately situated by itself, 29 III, 2 | and from left to right.~‘Blood is thickest when it is imbibed 30 III, 3 | the vessel, in which the blood broadens its channel as 31 III, 3 | appears to be filled with blood.~The branches of the blood-vessels 32 III, 3 | animals is destitute of blood, and no vein, great or small, 33 III, 4 | supplied abundantly with blood. For in little animals and 34 III, 4 | those scantily supplied with blood, either from natural and 35 III, 5 | All animals supplied with blood are furnished with sinews; 36 III, 6 | or fibre that is found in blood, but not in the blood of 37 III, 6 | in blood, but not in the blood of all animals alike. If 38 III, 6 | this fibre be left in the blood, the blood will coagulate; 39 III, 6 | be left in the blood, the blood will coagulate; if it be 40 III, 6 | removed or extracted, the blood is found to be incapable 41 III, 6 | fibrous matter is found in the blood of the great majority of 42 III, 6 | we fail to find it in the blood of the deer, the roe, the 43 III, 6 | the fibrous tissue, the blood of these animals does not 44 III, 6 | the extent observed in the blood of other animals. The blood 45 III, 6 | blood of other animals. The blood of the deer coagulates to 46 III, 6 | the hare: that is to the blood in either case coagulates, 47 III, 6 | jelly-like substance, like the blood of ordinary animals, but 48 III, 6 | the action of rennet. The blood of the antelope admits of 49 III, 6 | comes a little short of, the blood of sheep. Such are the properties 50 III, 7 | animals that are supplied with blood and furnished with feet, 51 III, 7 | other animals supplied with blood, some differ but little, 52 III, 16 | are somewhat small and the blood abnormally red; the viscera 53 III, 16 | whose veins are large the blood is somewhat black, the viscera 54 III, 19 | the consideration of the blood. In sanguineous animals 55 III, 19 | In sanguineous animals blood is the most universal and 56 III, 19 | corrupt or moribund. All blood is contained in a vascular 57 III, 19 | excepting in the heart. Blood is not sensitive to touch 58 III, 19 | When flesh is lacerated, blood exudes, if the animal be 59 III, 19 | the flesh be gangrened. Blood in a healthy condition is 60 III, 19 | taste, and red in colour, blood that deteriorates from natural 61 III, 19 | disease more or less black. Blood at its best, before it undergoes 62 III, 19 | for, as a general rule, blood coagulates unless the fibres 63 III, 19 | fibres be extracted. Bull’s blood is the quickest to coagulate.~ 64 III, 19 | abundantly supplied with blood than the sanguineous ovipara. 65 III, 19 | been attended to, have the blood neither too abundant-as 66 III, 19 | this condition have pure blood, but very little of it, 67 III, 19 | less becomes its supply of blood; for whatsoever is fat is 68 III, 19 | whatsoever is fat is destitute of blood.~A fat substance is incorruptible, 69 III, 19 | substance is incorruptible, but blood and all things containing 70 III, 19 | connected with the bones. Blood is finest and purest in 71 III, 19 | higher parts of the body blood is thicker and blacker than 72 III, 19 | than in the central parts.~Blood beats or palpitates in the 73 III, 19 | all over their bodies, and blood is the only liquid that 74 III, 19 | as long as life lasts. Blood is developed first of all 75 III, 19 | differentiated as a whole. If blood be removed or if it escape 76 III, 19 | quantity they die. If the blood get exceedingly liquid, 77 III, 19 | animals fall sick; for the blood then turns into something 78 III, 19 | like sweat. In some cases blood, when issuing from the veins, 79 III, 19 | animals are sleeping the blood is less abundantly supplied 80 III, 19 | pricked with a pin, the blood does not issue as copiously 81 III, 19 | the creature were awake. Blood is developed out of ichor 82 III, 19 | fat in like manner out of blood. If the blood get diseased, 83 III, 19 | manner out of blood. If the blood get diseased, haemorrhoids 84 III, 19 | veins may become varicose. Blood, if it corrupt in the body, 85 III, 19 | into a solid concretion.~Blood in the female differs from 86 III, 19 | and general health, the blood in the female is thicker 87 III, 19 | most richly supplied with blood, and of all female animals 88 III, 19 | most copious in woman. The blood of these discharges under 89 III, 19 | subject to diseases of the blood than the male.~Women are 90 III, 19 | imperfectly discharged.~Blood differs in quantity and 91 III, 19 | intermediate. In old animals the blood coagulates rapidly, even 92 III, 19 | coagulates rapidly, even blood at the surface of the body; 93 III, 19 | nothing else but unconcocted blood: either blood that has not 94 III, 19 | unconcocted blood: either blood that has not yet been concocted, 95 III, 20 | contained in vessels: as blood in veins, marrow in bones 96 III, 20 | first a liquid resembling blood, then a liquid mixed with 97 IV, 1 | treat of animals devoid of blood. These animals are divided 98 IV, 1 | animal that, being devoid of blood, has its flesh-like substance 99 IV, 7 | fly by a touch can draw blood with this organ, and the 100 IV, 7 | to all animals devoid of blood. Some have a stomach also, 101 IV, 8 | the presence of their own blood; and this faculty is manifested 102 v, 31 | multipedal and devoid of blood.~The parasite that feeds 103 VI, 2 | it is red, the colour of blood; as it grows, it becomes 104 VI, 3 | appears, like a speck of blood, in the white of the egg. 105 VI, 3 | from it two vein-ducts with blood in them trend in a convoluted 106 VI, 10 | large and supplied with blood.~All cartilaginous fishes 107 VI, 18 | at first much tinged with blood, but deeply dyed with it 108 VI, 18 | emits the least amount of blood; that is to say, of all 109 VII, 1 | this fluid resembles fresh blood. There is another discharge, 110 VII, 9 | a girl it is tinged with blood, though still watery. In 111 VII, 10 | child dies from loss of blood.) But if the afterbirth 112 VII, 10 | has been ligatured, the blood has run out into the cord 113 VII, 10 | known to squeeze back the blood into the child’s body from 114 VII, 10 | In colour it resembles blood, extremely dark and pitch-like, 115 VII, 11 | the menses happen to vomit blood are no whit the worse.~ 116 VIII, 2 | the object of cooling the blood. Others take in water as 117 VIII, 4 | scantily supplied with blood, is found in all oviparous 118 VIII, 6 | weight, and the hair, the blood, and the rest will weigh 119 VIII, 21| will appear suffused with blood, and further the animal 120 VIII, 24| may be of service to draw blood, or to castrate the male. 121 VIII, 28| animals that are devoid of blood and such as go into hiding 122 IX, 1 | union, and it is said drips blood from its eyes; it lays its 123 IX, 1 | another; it is said that the blood of the anthus will not intercommingle 124 IX, 1 | intercommingle with the blood of the aegithus. The crow


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