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Alphabetical    [«  »]
day-time 3
dayfly 1
daylight 3
days 122
daytime 7
dead 12
deadening 1
Frequency    [«  »]
127 where
124 blood
123 head
122 days
122 take
120 rule
118 called
Aristotle
The History of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

days

    Book,  Paragraph
1 I, 1 | their food and spend their days in the water, but do not 2 II, 17 | ribs are as numerous as the days of the month; in other words, 3 III, 21 | Torone cows run dry for a few days before calving, and have 4 v, 8 | weather, the name of "halcyon days" is given to the seven days 5 v, 8 | days" is given to the seven days preceding, and to as many 6 v, 8 | God lulls for fourteen days the winds to sleep~In winter; 7 v, 8 | and her brood.~And these days are calm, when southerly 8 v, 8 | halcyon is said to take seven days for building her nest, and 9 v, 8 | there are not always halcyon days about the time of the winter 10 v, 11 | period of gestation is thirty days. And, by the way, some of 11 v, 12 | of gestation is fifteen days. After the female has laid 12 v, 13 | excepting by the way, during the days about the winter solstice.~ 13 v, 14 | with the bitch is sixty days, or sixty-one, or sixty-two, 14 v, 14 | period is never under sixty days, or, if it is, the litter 15 v, 17 | hatching them for about twenty days it rids itself of them all 16 v, 17 | crawfish form in about fifteen days, and these crawfish are 17 v, 18 | were contained. Some fifty days later, the eggs burst and 18 v, 18 | lays its eggs after fifteen days of gestation; after the 19 v, 18 | comes in another fifteen days something like a bunch of 20 v, 19 | small grub; and in three days it is a tiny caterpillar. 21 v, 19 | as ascarids. After a few days they stand straight up on 22 v, 20 | comes at the close of seven days from copulation, and during 23 v, 20 | intervals of three or four days, corresponding to the lengths 24 v, 22 | the space of two or three days. Furthermore, in autumn 25 v, 22 | remains liquid for several days. If it be drawn off during 26 v, 22 | be drawn off during these days it has no consistency; but 27 v, 22 | consistency in about twenty days. The taste of thyme-honey 28 v, 27 | over them, and in three days the eggs or grubs take definite 29 v, 33 | rather less than thirty days it digs the eggs up again 30 v, 33 | broods over them for sixty days: for, by the way, the creature 31 v, 33 | growing to the end of its days.~ 32 v, 34 | young creature in three days; and at times the young 33 VI, 2 | hens hatch in eighteen days in summer, but occasionally 34 VI, 2 | sets and matures in ten days a general rule; the egg 35 VI, 3 | the common hen after three days and three nights there is 36 VI, 3 | When the egg is now ten days old the chick and all its 37 VI, 3 | the chick (so that, ten days after hatching, if you cut 38 VI, 4 | brought to birth within twenty days; and the mother bird pecks 39 VI, 4 | carries her eggs fourteen days; for as many more days the 40 VI, 4 | fourteen days; for as many more days the parent birds hatch the 41 VI, 4 | end of another fourteen days the chicks are so far capable 42 VI, 4 | for another within thirty days.)~ 43 VI, 6 | wings blanch, and for some days its talons get turned awry. 44 VI, 6 | broods for about thirty days.~The hatching period is 45 VI, 6 | extends over about twenty days, as in the case of the kite 46 VI, 6 | broods for about twenty days and then extrudes its young. 47 VI, 7 | indeed it is only for a few days that you will see hawks 48 VI, 9 | their eggs within thirty days or rather more. The peahen 49 VI, 9 | intervals of two or three days. Such as lay for the first 50 VI, 12 | disappears for about thirty days). Its young accompany it 51 VI, 12 | when they are about twelve days old, over and over again 52 VI, 14 | watch for forty or fifty days to prevent the-spawn being 53 VI, 14 | when they are only three days old young fishes are generated. 54 VI, 17 | is not longer than thirty days, with others it is a lesser 55 VI, 17 | extends over a number of days divisible by seven. The 56 VI, 17 | carries its spawn for thirty days; and the species of mullet 57 VI, 17 | considerable size in a few days; these fish go out of the 58 VI, 18 | been together only a few days before breeding time: if 59 VI, 20 | part of a year or sixty days: or more by one, two, or 60 VI, 20 | pups are blind for twelve days after birth. After pupping, 61 VI, 20 | year or for seventy-two days; and their pups are blind 62 VI, 20 | pups are blind for fourteen days. Other bitches carry their 63 VI, 20 | are blind for seventeen days. The bitch appears go in 64 VI, 20 | Menstruation continues for seven days, and a swelling of the genital 65 VI, 20 | the dog, but in the seven days that follow. The bitch as 66 VI, 20 | goes in heat for fourteen days, but occasionally for sixteen. 67 VI, 20 | supplied with milk five days before parturition; some 68 VI, 20 | parturition; some seven days previously, some four; and 69 VI, 20 | supplied with milk thirty days after lining. The milk at 70 VI, 21 | allowed an interval of twenty days before being again submitted. 71 VI, 22 | is not a fixed number of days that the stallion takes 72 VI, 23 | month of pregnancy. Seven days after casting a foal the 73 VI, 23 | bear for the rest of her days. The ass lives for more 74 VI, 28 | remains by the sow for thirty days. The number of the litter 75 VI, 29 | Conception comes on a few days after intercourse; and a 76 VI, 30 | goes with young for thirty days. She brings forth sometimes 77 VI, 30 | young the same number of days as the she-bear, and in 78 VI, 31 | bear for the rest of her days. The lioness has no mane, 79 VI, 33 | at intervals over as many days as the circumstances of 80 VI, 35 | within twelve particular days of the year. And they give 81 VI, 35 | transported Leto in so many days from the land of the Hyperboreans 82 VI, 37 | unaccountable: in a few days not a mouse will there be 83 VI, 37 | the time before these few days men fail to keep down their 84 VII, 2 | but a little while, two days or three, recovery is easy; 85 VII, 2 | are ailing during these days; and sometimes the discharge 86 VII, 3 | remain within for seven days then it is certain that 87 VII, 3 | duration being mostly thirty days in the case of a female 88 VII, 3 | a female and about forty days in the case of a male child. 89 VII, 3 | withheld for an equal number of days, but not in all cases with 90 VII, 3 | when the above-mentioned days are past, the discharge 91 VII, 3 | the space of these forty days.~In the case of a male embryo 92 VII, 10 | Until the child is forty days old it neither laughs nor 93 VIII, 2 | can live for five or six days; for a longer period if 94 VIII, 5 | fasting for two or three days together, being rendered 95 VIII, 6 | for the market in sixty days. Pig-dealers can tell the 96 VIII, 6 | must be starved for three days; and, by the way, animals 97 VIII, 6 | starvation; after the three days of starvation, pig-breeders 98 VIII, 6 | they miss one, and then two days, then three and four, until 99 VIII, 6 | interval extends over seven days. The pigsmeat used for 100 VIII, 8 | water for as much as four days, but after that when he 101 VIII, 10| the flocks salt every five days in summer, to the extent 102 VIII, 10| they be first put for three days through a process of starving. 103 VIII, 13| the ceryx for about thirty days at the rising of the Dog-star, 104 VIII, 14| some of them for several days, others for only the coldest 105 VIII, 14| others for only the coldest days, as the bee. For the bee 106 VIII, 15| in summer for about sixty days. The hake also and the gilthead 107 VIII, 16| and the owl hide for a few days.~ 108 VIII, 17| hides for at least forty days; during fourteen of these 109 VIII, 17| during fourteen of these days it is said not to move at 110 VIII, 17| during most of the subsequent days it moves, and from time 111 VIII, 20| murex lives for about fifty days after capture; during this 112 VIII, 21| kill within three or four days. The animal is chiefly subject 113 VIII, 24| without food for several days and turns rabid, it may 114 IX, 28 | day or at the most for two days, and is regarded as a table 115 IX, 37 | does for forty or fifty days, until the young are sufficiently 116 IX, 40 | bees is heard for several days, and for two or three days 117 IX, 40 | days, and for two or three days in advance a few bees are 118 IX, 40 | young and in fact only three days old, after shedding its 119 IX, 40 | discontinued only for the forty days that follow the winter solstice. 120 IX, 50 | has first to be kept two days without food, and, after 121 IX, 49B| continually for fifteen days and fifteen nights; afterwards 122 IX, 49B| raiment marks his youthful days,~The argent his maturity


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