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Alphabetical    [«  »]
now 69
nowhere 5
noxious 1
number 110
numbers 19
numbness 2
numerous 35
Frequency    [«  »]
111 say
111 white
110 her
110 number
109 bird
109 does
109 teeth
Aristotle
The History of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

number

    Book,  Paragraph
1 I, 5 | that have feet have an even number of them.~Of swimming creatures 2 I, 6 | have feet have a goodly number of them; and of the insects 3 I, 6 | kind of foretaste of the number of subjects and of the properties 4 I, 9 | These are naturally two in number. Each of them has an upper 5 I, 15 | consists of "toes", five in number; the fleshy part underneath 6 I, 15 | is surpassed by a great number of animals.~ 7 I, 16 | and there run through it a number of veins closely packed 8 II, 1 | and teats, likewise two in number, as the sheep; others have 9 II, 1 | they have a considerable number of breasts or dugs, but 10 II, 3 | that have teeth fewer in number and thinly set.~ 11 II, 5 | teeth, or tusks, two in number. In the male these tusks 12 II, 11 | surpassing in respect of number and relative strength those 13 II, 13 | and others have a great number; but all alike have the 14 II, 13 | all alike have the same number on both sides. Those that 15 II, 13 | Those that have the least number have one gill on either 16 II, 13 | double gills. So much for the number of gills as found in fishes.~ 17 II, 15 | usually about twenty in number.~Deer then, as has been 18 II, 16 | single organ composed of a number of small ones. (The bison 19 II, 17 | words, they are thirty in number.~Some affirm that the same 20 II, 17 | them low down and few in number. Fishes have them high up 21 II, 17 | been observed, are few in number, and are not situated high 22 III, 2 | most important ones, two in number, to the heart in the region 23 III, 2 | and from these run off a number of minute veins branching 24 III, 2 | terminates, there branch off a number of veins to the head; some 25 III, 3 | brain, and branches off in a number of fine and delicate veins 26 III, 4 | the liver, and from it a number of minute veins branch off 27 III, 4 | pancreas, from which vein run a number of veins through the mesentery. 28 III, 11 | growths are found are equal in number. The hair on the head grows 29 IV, 1 | sacs, and inside them a number of eggs, like in appearance 30 IV, 2 | feet or claws, are eight in number; then come the big feet, 31 IV, 2 | drops her spawn, are four in number and hairy, and on each of 32 IV, 2 | the crawfish are two in number), and in all cases there 33 IV, 5 | so-called eggs, identical in number in all cases, and that number 34 IV, 5 | number in all cases, and that number is always an odd number, 35 IV, 5 | number is always an odd number, to wit five. Up above, 36 IV, 7 | has practically the same number of segments as of nicks.~ 37 IV, 8 | others the use of a limited number of them. The total number 38 IV, 8 | number of them. The total number of the senses (for we have 39 IV, 8 | sense of taste, for a great number of them delight in special 40 IV, 8 | attracted by excrement. Again, a number of fishes live in caves; 41 v, 1 | matter, as is the case with a number of insects, while others 42 v, 10 | This animal lays a great number of eggs at a time; and the 43 v, 11 | in which are contained a number of small eggs. The ryades 44 v, 12 | extraordinarily prolific, for the number of individuals that come 45 v, 14 | the sow is the fewest in number; at the second litter she 46 v, 15 | delicate; and looks as though a number of husks of white chick-peas 47 v, 15 | are found on the ground a number of minute porphyrae, and 48 v, 15 | have collected a sufficient number and can attend to them at 49 v, 18 | helpless that the greater number perish; it is a fact that 50 v, 21 | the rest, six or seven in number, and growing in a way quite 51 v, 22 | if there be too large a number of kings in it; for the 52 v, 22 | of the hive is small in number. But when the weather is 53 v, 26 | land-scorpion also lays a number of egg shaped grubs, and 54 v, 26 | ones are about eleven in number.~ 55 v, 27 | sometimes three hundred in number. The spider attains its 56 v, 33 | night-time. It lays a very great number of eggs, amounting at times 57 v, 33 | The river-crocodile lays a number of eggs, sixty at the most, 58 v, 34 | young in one day, twenty in number, and one at a time. The 59 VI, 2 | Wind-eggs are laid by a number of birds: as for instance 60 VI, 2 | suppose: they are two in number, one below and the other 61 VI, 2 | take out of the shells a number of yolks and a number of 62 VI, 2 | a number of yolks and a number of whites and pour them 63 VI, 6 | two eggs; it lays a larger number. It broods for about twenty 64 VI, 9 | may be a slightly lesser number: she does not lay all the 65 VI, 9 | brood over and hatch a large number. They take every precaution, 66 VI, 13 | species would be infinite in number. The greater number of these 67 VI, 13 | infinite in number. The greater number of these eggs so deposited 68 VI, 17 | with all it extends over a number of days divisible by seven. 69 VI, 17 | eggs are not so many in number as large in size. The young 70 VI, 22 | twelfth. It is not a fixed number of days that the stallion 71 VI, 23 | and that is its natural number, occasionally however it 72 VI, 24 | large.~The mule lives for a number of years. There are on record 73 VI, 28 | sow for thirty days. The number of the litter and the period 74 VI, 29 | after intercourse; and a number of hinds can be impregnated 75 VI, 30 | goes with young the same number of days as the she-bear, 76 VI, 35 | conception and parturition, the number of the litter, and the blindness 77 VI, 36 | the fact that a certain number of them were brought into 78 VI, 36 | animal is there still. The number originally introduced was 79 VI, 37 | astonishing both for the number of the young and for the 80 VI, 37 | telling. In many places their number is so incalculable that 81 VII, 3 | be withheld for an equal number of days, but not in all 82 VII, 3 | fortieth day; and the greater number of such embryos as perish 83 VII, 4 | been stated. The largest number ever brought forth is five, 84 VII, 8 | the vessels are four in number, and in smaller animals 85 VIII, 1 | physical organs, so in a number of animals we observe gentleness 86 VIII, 2 | land, whereas of the great number of land animals inhaling 87 VIII, 2 | recognize their holes by the number of shells lying about. Some 88 VIII, 2 | full-grown it is preyed upon by a number of fishes, and especially 89 VIII, 3 | quarry in lagoons.~A great number of birds are omnivorous. 90 VIII, 7 | from sexual commerce over a number of years; and it is with 91 VIII, 13| comes into season again. A number of fish also are found in 92 VIII, 15| itself under a stone.~A great number of fishes also take this 93 VIII, 16| 16~A great number of birds also go into hiding; 94 VIII, 19| summer; for owing to the number of the rivers that discharge 95 VIII, 19| of food. Besides, a great number of fishes, such as the bonito 96 VIII, 19| Nauplia, in the Argolid, a number of fishes have been known 97 VIII, 19| find an unusually large number of smaller fish. It matters 98 VIII, 21| If the pimples are few in number the flesh is comparatively 99 VIII, 28| ashore and saw the bones of a number of oxen, and that they were 100 IX, 15 | some to lay the largest number of eggs; seventeen eggs 101 IX, 15 | said always to lay an odd number. Like others we have mentioned, 102 IX, 40 | perfumes.~They perish from a number of accidental causes, and 103 IX, 40 | pieces of meat on it; when a number of the wasps settle on it, 104 IX, 41 | cells, small and few in number; others build many and large 105 IX, 41 | sticky and gumlike. A large number of mother-wasps are found 106 IX, 44 | open, he is forced by the number of the hunters to run while 107 IX, 44 | captured when lame, had a number of his teeth broken; which 108 IX, 44 | its frame will endure any number of blows, and its head is 109 IX, 46 | elephant. It can be taught a number of tricks, the drift and 110 IX, 49B| 49B~A considerable number of birds change according


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