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Alphabetical    [«  »]
effluxion 2
effort 9
efforts 2
egg 95
egg-formation 1
egg-like 3
egg-mass 2
Frequency    [«  »]
96 observed
96 quadrupeds
95 body
95 egg
95 eyes
94 bees
94 year
Aristotle
The History of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

egg

   Book,  Paragraph
1 I, 5 | and rays.)~What we term an egg is a certain completed result 2 I, 5 | comes from part only of the egg, while the rest serves for 3 I, 5 | brought forth, with others an egg is brought to light, with 4 III, 1 | parts looks like a single egg, and those fishes whose 5 III, 1 | and those fishes whose egg is described as crumbling 6 III, 10| fishes as have the crumbling egg or roe. For of the lanky 7 III, 10| the conger has no such egg, nor the muraena, and the 8 III, 10| muraena, and the eel has no egg at all.~The hair differs 9 IV, 1 | certain red formations. The egg of the octopus is single, 10 IV, 1 | colour white; the size of the egg is so great as to fill a 11 IV, 1 | by others the "polypus" egg’; and the shell of this 12 IV, 2 | are the properties of the egg and of the convolutes in 13 IV, 4 | regard to the so-called "egg", in those that have it, 14 IV, 4 | corresponds to the so-called egg of which we are speaking. 15 IV, 4 | membrane.) The so-called egg has no outlet in any of 16 IV, 4 | region with the gut, but the "egg" is situated on the right-hand 17 IV, 11| engender either live young or egg or grub. In the several 18 IV, 11| was ever yet seen with an egg. And animals that are viviparous 19 v, 14| the case of the bird, the egg.~For animals that copulate, 20 v, 17| for in all these cases the egg continues to grow.~The spawn 21 v, 18| substance, and when the egg bursts it comes out. The 22 v, 18| soon as the female lays the egg, something like a hail-stone; 23 v, 18| octopus.~From one single egg comes one single sepia; 24 v, 19| this species lays a hard egg, resembling the seed of 25 v, 19| from a portion only of an egg, but the grub entire grows 26 v, 22| into bees and drones. The egg of the king bee is reddish 27 v, 22| Whenever the bee lays an egg in the comb there is always 28 v, 23| side of the cell, and the egg clings to the wall of the 29 v, 26| land-scorpion also lays a number of egg shaped grubs, and broods 30 v, 33| smallness of the original egg and the huge size of the 31 v, 33| full-grown animal. For the egg is not larger than that 32 v, 33| small, answering to the egg in size, but the full-grown 33 v, 34| oviparous internally. The egg, as with the egg of fishes, 34 v, 34| internally. The egg, as with the egg of fishes, is uniform in 35 v, 34| grows on the surface of the egg, and, like the young of 36 v, 34| out from the inside of the egg. The mother viper brings 37 VI, 2 | 2~The egg in the case of all birds 38 VI, 2 | eggs. The interior of the egg is of two colours, and the 39 VI, 2 | the full time is come, the egg detaches itself and protrudes, 40 VI, 2 | substances resembling the egg at a critical point of its 41 VI, 2 | white, then no change in the egg takes place: the wind-egg 42 VI, 2 | wind-egg does not become a true egg, and the true egg does not 43 VI, 2 | a true egg, and the true egg does not take on the breed 44 VI, 2 | from the roasting of the egg. The yolk and the white 45 VI, 2 | Conception of the true egg and conformation of the 46 VI, 2 | smell.~The generation of the egg after copulation and the 47 VI, 2 | subsequent hatching of the egg are not brought about within 48 VI, 2 | of the parent-birds. The egg of the common hen after 49 VI, 2 | days a general rule; the egg of the pigeon in a somewhat 50 VI, 2 | faculty of holding back the egg at the very moment of parturition; 51 VI, 2 | to lay she can keep the egg back in abeyance. A singular 52 VI, 3 | 3~Generation from the egg proceeds in an identical 53 VI, 3 | the primal element of the egg is situated, and where the 54 VI, 3 | situated, and where the egg gets hatched; and the heart 55 VI, 3 | blood, in the white of the egg. This point beats and moves 56 VI, 3 | convoluted course (as the egg substance goes on growing, 57 VI, 3 | chick is in the white of the egg, and the nutriment comes 58 VI, 3 | out of the yolk.~When the egg is now ten days old the 59 VI, 3 | them; and the white of the egg is underneath the lower 60 VI, 3 | comes the membrane of the egg, not that of the shell, 61 VI, 3 | twentieth day, if you open the egg and touch the chick, it 62 VI, 3 | as to generation from the egg in the case of birds.~Birds 63 VI, 4 | lays a male and a female egg, and generally lays the 64 VI, 4 | generally lays the male egg first; after laying it allows 65 VI, 4 | and then lays the second egg. The male takes its turn 66 VI, 4 | the night. The first-laid egg is hatched and brought to 67 VI, 4 | bird pecks a hole in the egg the day before she hatches 68 VI, 10| shift their position.~The egg with all fishes is not of 69 VI, 10| well.~Development from the egg in fishes differs from that 70 VI, 10| the development from the egg onwards is identical in 71 VI, 10| at the upper part of the egg, and the veins extend in 72 VI, 10| birds. The embryo and the egg are enveloped by a common 73 VI, 10| ray, after it has laid the egg the shell-formation breaks 74 VI, 10| like formations; when the egg descends, as soon as it 75 VI, 10| modes of generation from the egg.~ 76 VI, 13| again.~Development from the egg takes place similarly with 77 VI, 13| at the upper end of the egg and is enveloped in a membrane, 78 VI, 13| appear later on. After the egg has been used up, the young 79 VI, 13| the juice oozing from the egg; by and by, they are nourished 80 VI, 14| products and discharge the egg in the case of the female 81 VI, 14| membrane that envelops the egg and the young fish. When 82 VI, 14| sheat-fish the growth from the egg is exceptionally slow, and, 83 VI, 14| day and also later. The egg of the sheat-fish is as 84 VI, 14| big as a vetch-seed; the egg of the carp and of the carp-species 85 VI, 15| also from pairing and the egg. This occurs in ponds here 86 VI, 16| neither from pair nor from the egg.~There can be no doubt that 87 VI, 16| from pairing nor from an egg. Some writers, however, 88 VI, 17| Euxine, there comes from the egg what some call scordylae, 89 VI, 17| fat feels smooth and the egg rough. Some congers are 90 VII, 7 | formed, it looks like an egg enveloped in its membrane 91 VII, 7 | their young alive or in the egg, develop in the same way: 92 VII, 7 | have it attached to the egg, and some to both parts 93 VII, 7 | membranous envelopes surround the egg, and in other cases the 94 IX, 11| localities. The female lays one egg as a rule, and two at the 95 IX, 29| linnet. it lays only one egg and does not hatch it itself,


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