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Alphabetical    [«  »]
hail-stone 1
hail-stones 1
hailstones 1
hair 90
hair-all 1
hair-coated 8
hair-coating 1
Frequency    [«  »]
91 above
91 insects
90 down
90 hair
90 stomach
90 winter
90 years
Aristotle
The History of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

hair

   Book,  Paragraph
1 I, 1 | such as sinew, skin, vein, hair, bone, gristle, nail, horn ( 2 I, 6 | must regard as a kind of hair such prickly hairs as hedgehogs 3 I, 6 | spines perform the office of hair, and not of feet as is the 4 I, 7 | the middle line, where the hair parts, is called the crown 5 I, 7 | double fall or set of the hair.~ 6 II, 1 | either comparatively void of hair or smooth and void of hair 7 II, 1 | hair or smooth and void of hair altogether. With man the 8 II, 1 | and lower eyelashes, and hair under the armpits and on 9 II, 1 | pubes. No other animal has hair in either of these localities, 10 II, 8 | quadruped-only that the hair is coarse, so that the ape 11 II, 8 | like man, only covered with hair, and it bends these legs 12 II, 10| ones only; neither are they hair coated, but are in all cases 13 II, 12| have neither scutes nor hair, but feathers; and the feathers 14 III, 2 | skin, membrane, sinew, hair, nails, and whatever corresponds 15 III, 9 | colour of the skin and the hair. For according as the skin 16 III, 10| following are the properties of hair and of parts analogous to 17 III, 10| and of parts analogous to hair, and of skin or hide. All 18 III, 10| furnished with feet have hair; all oviparous animals furnished 19 III, 10| eel has no egg at all.~The hair differs in the way of thickness 20 III, 10| harder and the thicker is the hair; and the hair is inclined 21 III, 10| thicker is the hair; and the hair is inclined to grow in abundance 22 III, 10| fitted for the growth of hair at all. The facts are similar 23 III, 10| soft-haired animals the hair gets harder with good feeding, 24 III, 10| scantier from the same cause. Hair differs in quality also 25 III, 10| the locality: just as the hair in man is hard in warm places 26 III, 10| cold ones. Again, straight hair is inclined to be soft, 27 III, 10| inclined to be soft, and curly hair to be bristly.~ 28 III, 11| 11~Hair is naturally fissile, and 29 III, 11| animals. In some animals the hair goes on gradually hardening 30 III, 11| until it no longer resembles hair but spine, as in the case 31 III, 11| not all such animals have hair, save only under the circumstances 32 III, 11| circumstances described above. The hair changes its colour as animals 33 III, 11| in the case of the horse. Hair turns grey from the point 34 III, 11| a proof that greyness of hair does not, as some believe 35 III, 11| have been known where the hair became grey while the patients 36 III, 11| them on their recovery. (Hair is more apt to turn grey 37 III, 11| outer air.) In men, the hair over the temples is the 38 III, 11| first to turn grey, and the hair in the front grows grey 39 III, 11| grows grey sooner than the hair at the back; and the hair 40 III, 11| hair at the back; and the hair on the pubes is the last 41 III, 11| are equal in number. The hair on the head grows scanty 42 III, 11| this remark applies only to hair in front; for no man ever 43 III, 11| puberty, the later growths of hair never come at all; and, 44 III, 11| constitutionally impotent.~Hair as a rule grows more or 45 III, 11| grows in age; chiefly the hair on the head, then that in 46 III, 11| that in the beard, and fine hair grows longest of all. With 47 III, 11| plucked out afterwards. Every hair is supplied with a mucous 48 III, 11| diversity of colour in the hair admit of a similar diversity 49 III, 11| is thickly covered with hair, and in other cases these 50 III, 11| bearded men to baldness.~The hair is inclined to grow in certain 51 III, 11| these circumstances the hair hardens concomitantly with 52 III, 11| a tendency to get their hair again.~If a hair be cut, 53 III, 11| get their hair again.~If a hair be cut, it does not grow 54 III, 11| quadrupeds as they grow old the hair in some and the wool in 55 III, 12| change the colour of their hair with a change in their drinking-water, 56 III, 12| as a general rule have no hair on their internal surfaces, 57 III, 12| their extremities, they have hair on the upper, but not on 58 III, 12| only animal known to have hair inside its mouth and underneath 59 III, 15| of fibre and membrane, of hair, nail, claw and hoof, of 60 III, 20| instance all animals that have hair, as man and the horse; and 61 IV, 2 | two others, covered with hair, a little underneath the 62 IV, 11| the hair-that is, where hair is found; and, where there 63 IV, 11| and, where there is no hair, less strongly furnished 64 v, 14| for some animals have no hair at all, and others have 65 v, 19| green or dry; some in the hair of animals; some in the 66 VII, 1 | seed; and at the same time hair appears upon the pubes, 67 VII, 2 | limbs it is turned into hair and into bodily substance ( 68 VII, 4 | is just when the child’s hair is beginning to grow.~In 69 VII, 4 | women their own natural hair is inclined to grow thin 70 VII, 4 | out, but on the other hand hair tends to grow on parts of 71 VII, 11| drinking happen to swallow a hair, she gets a pain in her 72 VII, 11| the pain lasts till the hair either find its own way 73 VIII, 5| like a horse, only that the hair is stiffer and longer and 74 VIII, 5| hears a bone crack. The hair of the beaver is rough, 75 VIII, 5| in appearance between the hair of the seal and the hair 76 VIII, 5| hair of the seal and the hair of the deer.~ 77 VIII, 6| of that weight, and the hair, the blood, and the rest 78 IX, 13| its nest on trees, out of hair and tags of wool; when acorns 79 IX, 13| under-mattress to lie on of hair and wool. The blackbird 80 IX, 39| that shoot out with their hair, as for instance the porcupine. 81 IX, 45| to its withers; but the hair in its mane is softer than 82 IX, 45| mane is softer than the hair in the horse’s mane, and 83 IX, 45| closely. The colour of the hair is brown-yellow; the mane 84 IX, 45| has an undercoat of woolly hair. The animal is not found 85 IX, 45| and bright. The tuft of hair on the forehead reaches 86 IX, 45| excrement is so pungent that the hair of hunting-dogs is burnt 87 IX, 50| boyhood, the later-growing hair never comes, and the voice 88 IX, 50| manhood, the late growths of hair quit them except the growth 89 IX, 50| The congenital growths of hair never fall out, for a eunuch 90 IX, 50| stop up the incision with hair to give an outlet to suppurating


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