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Alphabetical [« »] crawl 3 crayfish 1 creates 1 creature 101 creatures 149 credit 1 credited 1 | Frequency [« »] 103 less 103 much 102 many 101 creature 101 regard 101 side 100 however | Aristotle The History of Animals IntraText - Concordances creature |
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1 I, 1 | found in water, but no such creature is found on dry land. In 2 I, 1 | it is the nature of the creature, though it lives in water, 3 I, 1 | and some wriggle. But no creature is able only to move by 4 I, 1 | instruction; but no other creature except man can recall the 5 I, 5 | with some animals a living creature is brought forth, with others 6 I, 5 | observe in passing, this creature is exceptional not only 7 I, 10 | only, or nearly the only, creature, that has eyes of diverse 8 I, 11 | indeed it is possible for a creature to live without using this 9 I, 11 | and it is the only living creature that does so.~Furthermore, 10 I, 11 | the river crocodile; this creature moves the upper jaw only.~ 11 I, 17 | than in any other known creature. The ducts that lead into 12 II, 1 | except in cases where a creature is said metaphorically, 13 II, 8 | of the two eyelids, this creature has them on both, only very 14 II, 8 | way resembles a heel. The creature uses its feet either as 15 II, 12 | structure of its tongue; for the creature can protrude its tongue 16 II, 12 | broad-tongued birds. No oviparous creature has an epiglottis over the 17 II, 13 | of the genitals. And this creature is not provided, like quadrupeds, 18 II, 14 | affairs of law and love. The creature is unfit for eating. Some 19 II, 17 | Thus, the windpipe of the creature is exceptionally long, and 20 III, 1 | testicles, nor any other creature that has gills, nor any 21 III, 12 | animals, such as birds, no creature is liable to change of colour 22 III, 12 | nor will the wing of any creature that has undivided wings. 23 III, 12 | the bee lose it, but the creature will die of the loss.~ 24 III, 19 | so that, if the sleeping creature be pricked with a pin, the 25 III, 19 | copiously as it would if the creature were awake. Blood is developed 26 IV, 1 | rear. The "head", while the creature is alive, is hard, and looks 27 IV, 1 | a vessel larger than the creature’s head. The sepia has two 28 IV, 1 | and the shell of this creature is something like a separate 29 IV, 4 | thorax is larger in this creature than in the spider. It has 30 IV, 5 | For the food on which the creature lives lies down below; consequently 31 IV, 6 | contains the liquid. The creature has no other organ whether 32 IV, 7 | with claws, as is also the creature resembling a scorpion found 33 IV, 7 | and by the aid of this the creature feeds on dew, and on dew 34 IV, 7 | aver that on one occasion a creature of this description was 35 IV, 8 | cottus or bullhead; this creature burrows under a rock, and 36 IV, 8 | you apply fleabane to the creature, it drops off at the very 37 IV, 8 | the purple-fish; for this creature is enticed by baits of rancid 38 IV, 8 | any one speaks aloud, the creature makes efforts to escape. 39 IV, 9 | above mentioned. For this creature has a voice (and can therefore 40 IV, 10 | as you would expect in a creature suddenly awakened. Further, 41 v, 11 | the size and vigour of the creature, but also in regard to its 42 v, 12 | of the white poplar; the creature is extraordinarily prolific, 43 v, 19 | and out flies the winged creature that we call the psyche 44 v, 19 | then the necydalus; and the creature passes through all these 45 v, 19 | prasocuris or leekbane; this creature is also winged. From the 46 v, 19 | wingless glow-worm; and this creature again suffers a metamorphosis, 47 v, 19 | cannot destroy; for this creature, so the story goes, not 48 v, 30 | tettigometra (or nymph), and the creature is sweetest to the taste 49 v, 30 | summer solstice comes, the creature issues from the husk at 50 v, 30 | becomes the perfect cicada. creature, also, at once turns black 51 v, 30 | climbing your finger: for the creature is so weak-sighted that 52 v, 32 | the cloth or wool, for the creature drinks up any moisture that 53 v, 32 | also in men’s clothes.~A creature is also found in wax long 54 v, 32 | faggot-bearer", as strange a creature as is known. Its head projects 55 v, 32 | stuck by accident to the creature as it went walking about. 56 v, 32 | psen, or fig-wasp. This creature is a grub at first; but 57 v, 33 | days: for, by the way, the creature is very long-lived. And 58 v, 34 | bursts from off the young creature in three days; and at times 59 VI, 3 | on to the thin gut of the creature, and by this time a considerable 60 VI, 3 | palpitate as though the creature were respiring. So much 61 VI, 4 | from the minute size of the creature.~The pigeon, as a rule, 62 VI, 10 | are largest; and as the creature grows the egg-substance 63 VI, 12 | period; and, in fact, the creature is remarkable for the strength 64 VI, 15 | it dies away and another creature takes its place, and so, 65 VI, 19 | flock: and to this duty the creature is trained from its earliest 66 VI, 20 | the conclusion that the creature sheds the rest in due turn. 67 VI, 24 | forbidding any baker driving the creature away from his bread-tray. 68 VI, 29 | extreme longevity to this creature.~In the mountain called 69 VIII, 2 | lungs; for, by the way, the creature is furnished with this organ 70 VIII, 2 | cordylus or water-newt; this creature is furnished not with lungs 71 VIII, 2 | animal is mutilated, and the creature passes from the male to 72 VIII, 2 | their way. The mouth of this creature is in the middle of its 73 VIII, 2 | the stone to which the one creature clings corresponds to the 74 VIII, 2 | founded on the fact that the creature is often found with its 75 VIII, 2 | off its body. There is no creature known to prey upon the spawn 76 VIII, 4 | its juices and eject the creature whole. And, by the way, 77 VIII, 6 | fattening process begins, the creature must be starved for three 78 VIII, 17| head, and so on, until the creature presents to view only a 79 VIII, 17| to the surface, for the creature emerges just as the embryo 80 VIII, 17| breaking up of the husk the creature issues out, leaving a little 81 VIII, 27| about a lighted candle: this creature engenders a brood full of 82 VIII, 27| or "borer", with which creature the bee never interferes. 83 VIII, 28| first cross is a savage creature. They take the bitch to 84 VIII, 29| to the bite of any other creature. If a pig goes into water 85 IX, 1 | metal prong; after this the creature soon becomes tame, and obeys 86 IX, 5 | animal’s left horn; that the creature keeps it out of sight because 87 IX, 5 | in complexity until the creature is six years old: after 88 IX, 37 | come to a savoury bait; the creature does not bite with its teeth, 89 IX, 37 | when they espy a dangerous creature, and the largest of them 90 IX, 37 | discharge, which envelops the creature in a kind of nest. Of shell-fish, 91 IX, 37 | The octopus is a stupid creature, for it will approach a 92 IX, 37 | before this time of year the creature is at its largest. After 93 IX, 37 | octopus, but that the young creature is much stronger than the 94 IX, 39 | end-threads, until some creature gets into the web and begins 95 IX, 39 | its prey. Then, when any creature touches the web and the 96 IX, 39 | first ties and wraps the creature round with threads until 97 IX, 39 | instance the porcupine. The creature can attack animals larger 98 IX, 40 | settles on the flesh of any creature, or ever eats animal food. 99 IX, 40 | own species nor any other creature, but in the close proximity 100 IX, 40 | hive, and in every way the creature is remarkable for its cleanly 101 IX, 48 | rapidity of movement of this creature. It appears to be the fleetest