Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
whip-hand 1
whirling 1
whit 1
white 111
white-coloured 2
white-fish 1
white-rump 1
Frequency    [«  »]
111 comes
111 grow
111 say
111 white
110 her
110 number
109 bird
Aristotle
The History of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

white

    Book,  Paragraph
1 I, 9 | part outside this is the "white". A part common to the upper 2 I, 10 | 10~Of the eye the white is pretty much the same 3 II, 2 | teeth in young dogs are white and sharp-pointed; in old 4 III, 1 | squeezed, the sperm oozes out white in colour. As to the differences 5 III, 1 | turning back, in which is the white fluid, are marked BB; the 6 III, 5 | liquid mucus is developed, white and glutinous, and the organ, 7 III, 9 | of an animal is black, or white, or of medium hue, so are 8 III, 9 | the teeth and bones are white, but the nails are black, 9 III, 11 | old, and in man it turns white or grey. With animals, in 10 III, 11 | of cases, grey hairs are white from the beginning; and 11 III, 12 | downright black plumage turn white or grey, as the raven, the 12 III, 12 | a change of colour from white to black. (Further, most 13 III, 12 | species of animal is found white in one district and black 14 III, 12 | which one makes the lambs white and the other black. The 15 III, 21 | livid colour is better than white for nursing purposes; and 16 III, 22 | animals it is not so. It is white in all cases, and Herodotus 17 III, 22 | Sperm issues from the body white and consistent, if it be 18 IV, 1 | colour, smooth, and in colour white; the size of the egg is 19 IV, 1 | eggs, like in appearance to white hailstones. For the disposition 20 IV, 2 | duct in both is thin and white, and charged with a sallow-coloured 21 IV, 2 | two separate and distinct white substances, resembling in 22 IV, 3 | little bodies, long and white, and others spotted red. 23 IV, 4 | crop. Underneath come two white firm formations, mastoid 24 IV, 4 | the larger snails, a long white duct enveloped in a membrane, 25 IV, 4 | which we are treating is white and the egg-mass of the 26 IV, 4 | these formations, and the white ones, only that the formations 27 IV, 4 | as is the case with the white formation in the snail; 28 IV, 4 | formation in the snail; for this white formation in the snail corresponds 29 IV, 5 | there are sea-urchins of a white colour, shells, spines, 30 v, 12 | resembles the fruit of the white poplar; the creature is 31 v, 12 | penis, in the tentacle, is white. The female, after laying 32 v, 15 | though a number of husks of white chick-peas were all stuck 33 v, 15 | In colour it looks like a white membrane, and this is what 34 v, 15 | In some of the testaceans white crabs are found, very diminutive 35 v, 16 | the ordinary sponges are white while the slime is in them, 36 v, 18 | pairing and copulation, lay a white spawn; and this spawn, as 37 v, 18 | vine or the fruit of the white poplar, as has been previously 38 v, 18 | increase in size; and they are white at the outset, but black 39 v, 18 | formed inside out of the white substance, and when the 40 v, 18 | the young sepia grows the white substance grows less and 41 v, 18 | in the case of birds, the white substance in the case of 42 v, 18 | their colour changes from white to red in their alarm.~Crustaceans, 43 v, 19 | decays, and first turns white, then black, and finally 44 v, 19 | snows of Media are large and white; and all such grubs are 45 v, 22 | of bees and of drones is white, and from the young come 46 v, 22 | are found bees exceedingly white in colour, and these bees 47 v, 22 | they derive their honey. A white and very consistent honey 48 v, 24 | insects lay their eggs, and white grubs are produced wrapped 49 v, 27 | to say, it is thick and white.~The meadow spider lays 50 v, 30 | as they are full then of white eggs.~If you make a sudden 51 v, 32 | smallest of animalcules and is white in colour, and is designated 52 v, 33 | eggs, sixty at the most, white in colour, and broods over 53 VI, 2 | of two colours, and the white part is outside and the 54 VI, 2 | or yolk and less of the white. Eggs vary in colour according 55 VI, 2 | their kind. Some eggs are white, as those of the pigeon 56 VI, 2 | of animals in general, is white. After the female has submitted 57 VI, 2 | it is little in size and white in colour; by and by it 58 VI, 2 | together within and the white settles round it on the 59 VI, 2 | both the yellow and the white remain as they were. Wind-eggs 60 VI, 2 | change of the yellow to the white the hen that contains wind-eggs, 61 VI, 2 | change of the yellow to the white, then no change in the egg 62 VI, 2 | rapidity.~The yolk and the white are diverse not only in 63 VI, 2 | influence of cold, whereas the white instead of congealing is 64 VI, 2 | rather to liquefy. Again, the white stiffens under the influence 65 VI, 2 | the egg. The yolk and the white are separated by a membrane 66 VI, 3 | a speck of blood, in the white of the egg. This point beats 67 VI, 3 | at first very small and white. The head is clearly distinguished, 68 VI, 3 | life-element of the chick is in the white of the egg, and the nutriment 69 VI, 3 | peeled off them there is a white and cold liquid inside, 70 VI, 3 | another part downward, and the white liquid is between them; 71 VI, 3 | is between them; and the white of the egg is underneath 72 VI, 3 | outset.) On the tenth day the white is at the extreme outer 73 VI, 3 | Inside this membrane is a white liquid; then comes the chick, 74 VI, 3 | leading into the enveloping white substance. (A membrane with 75 VI, 3 | and the outer residuum is white (and there comes a white 76 VI, 3 | white (and there comes a white substance inside). By and 77 VI, 3 | eggs a thin partition of white intervenes to prevent the 78 VI, 10 | the colour is nearer to white than to yellow, and that 79 VI, 10 | young chicks, and is partly white and partly yellow.~As regards 80 VI, 10 | midriff, something resembling white breasts, which never make 81 VI, 11 | flows out spontaneously as a white fluid; the ducts are bifurcate, 82 VI, 18 | parts. Mares drip with a white liquid at this season.~Female 83 VI, 19 | them late. Lambs are born white and black according as white 84 VI, 19 | white and black according as white or black veins are under 85 VI, 19 | s tongue; the lambs are white if the veins are white, 86 VI, 19 | are white if the veins are white, and black if the veins 87 VI, 19 | the veins are black, and white and black if the veins are 88 VI, 19 | and black if the veins are white and black; and red if the 89 VI, 20 | young dogs the teeth are white and sharp pointed, with 90 VII, 1 | is another discharge, a white one, by the way, which occurs 91 VII, 12 | and red wine is worse than white, especially when taken undiluted; 92 VIII, 3 | more ashen-coloured than white. Further, of birds that 93 VIII, 3 | omnivorous. There are also the white gull, the cepphus, the aethyia, 94 VIII, 13| cartilaginous fishes, the white conger, the serranus, the 95 VIII, 17| period; as does also the white mouse of Pontus.~(Of animals 96 VIII, 17| presents to view only a white surface all over. The sloughing 97 VIII, 19| winters; their eyes grow white, and when caught they are 98 VIII, 30| and after the spring get white again. The phycis also changes 99 VIII, 30| its hue: in general it is white, but in spring it is mottled; 100 IX, 1 | kinds: the ash coloured, the white, and the starry heron (or 101 IX, 6 | fur, in its look, in the white of its belly, and in its 102 IX, 18 | there are three in all-the white heron has handsome plumage, 103 IX, 19 | everywhere, the other is quite white, about the same size as 104 IX, 27 | there are two kinds, the white and the black. The white 105 IX, 27 | white and the black. The white ones are found over Egypt, 106 IX, 32 | percnopterus, very large, with white head, very short wings, 107 IX, 37 | found in the lagoon the white gudgeon is not a marine 108 IX, 40 | Bees feed on thyme; and the white thyme is better than the 109 IX, 40 | golden in hue is excellent. White honey does not come from 110 IX, 49B| knightly crest,~Now in the white hawk’s silver plumage drest,~ 111 IX, 49B| changing, on the hawk’s white wing~He greets the apparition


IntraText® (V89) Copyright 1996-2007 EuloTech SRL