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Alphabetical [« »] membranous 11 membras 2 memory 3 men 79 mends 1 meninx 1 menses 3 | Frequency [« »] 79 between 79 caught 79 front 79 men 79 mouth 79 takes 79 womb | Aristotle The History of Animals IntraText - Concordances men |
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1 I, 1 | with horses, kine, swine, (men), sheep, goats, and dogs.~ 2 I, 1 | some frequent the abodes of men, as the pigeon.~Some, again, 3 I, 5 | two, as is the case with men and birds, and with men 4 I, 5 | men and birds, and with men and birds only; some have 5 I, 7 | of women; in the case of men, as a general rule, three 6 I, 7 | double; that is to say, some men are double crowned, not 7 I, 8 | termed the forehead. When men have large foreheads, they 8 I, 15 | exception single jointed. Men that have the inside or 9 I, 15 | given to those parts in men and other animals that are 10 I, 16 | aperture through which, when men, in drinking, inhale any 11 II, 1 | upon it.~Whatever parts men have in front, these parts 12 II, 1 | belly; and whatever parts men have behind, these parts 13 II, 3 | than females in the case of men, sheep, goats, and swine; 14 II, 4 | of the like phenomenon in men too. This happens, when 15 III, 2 | inspected bodies of living men reduced to extreme attenuation 16 III, 2 | kidneys, and these with men terminate at the testicle, 17 III, 3 | collarbones, and then pass on, in men through the armpits to the 18 III, 3 | are pressed externally, men, though not actually choked, 19 III, 9 | the bones. Thus in black men, such as the Aethiopians 20 III, 11 | the hide of the ox; for men manufacture glue out of 21 III, 11 | action of the outer air.) In men, the hair over the temples 22 III, 11 | more scanty and sparse. Men and women are at times born 23 III, 11 | tongue.~In some cases among men the upper lip and the chin 24 III, 11 | the way, smooth-chinned men are less inclined than bearded 25 III, 11 | less inclined than bearded men to baldness.~The hair is 26 III, 11 | the nails.~In the case of men of strong sexual passions 27 III, 11 | the quicker to come. When men are afflicted with varicose 28 III, 20 | of a fortune. With some men, after puberty, milk can 29 IV, 9 | converse does not hold good. Men that are born deaf are in 30 IV, 9 | modification and of improvement. Men have the same voice or vocal 31 IV, 10 | appear that not only do men dream, but horses also, 32 IV, 10 | been known of full-grown men and women that have never 33 v, 5 | sideways, belly to belly. Some men assure us that they have 34 v, 8 | this temperate interlude~Men call the Holy Season, when 35 v, 31 | the lice jump out. In some men the appearance of lice is 36 v, 31 | with moisture; and, indeed, men have been known to succumb 37 v, 31 | are apt to be lousy, but men’s in less degree; and women 38 v, 31 | more subject to lice than men. But, whenever people are 39 v, 32 | This grub is found also in men’s clothes.~A creature is 40 VI, 18 | reason it is stated that men who have charge of elephants 41 VI, 20 | sheds the rest in due turn. Men discern the age of a dog 42 VI, 37 | time before these few days men fail to keep down their 43 VII, 1 | boy’s are higher than the men’s; and the girls’ voices 44 VII, 1 | for its repetition.~Some men are congenitally impotent 45 VII, 1 | congenital incapacity. Both men and women are liable to 46 VII, 1 | then acquired. And among men, the breasts grow more conspicuous 47 VII, 1 | of women, both in young men and old, when the individual 48 VII, 1 | becomes fertile, but young men and women produce undersized 49 VII, 1 | development and ages quickly in men of intemperate lusts and 50 VII, 1 | ripe for child-bearing, but men go on increasing in vigour. 51 VII, 1 | this time of life that in men the beard makes its appearance.~ 52 VII, 2 | similar to be remarked of men: for in proportion to his 53 VII, 2 | animals), especially such men as are of a moist habit 54 VII, 2 | over corpulent, and fair men in greater degree than dark. 55 VII, 5 | capacity to procreate in men, and the cessation of these 56 VII, 6 | 6~Men in most cases continue to 57 VII, 6 | until seventy years; and men have been actually known 58 VII, 6 | years of age. With many men and many women it so happens 59 VII, 6 | offspring; for sometimes men and women in union with 60 VII, 6 | birth. Furthermore, some men and some women produce female 61 VII, 6 | It is a common thing with men to be at first sexually 62 VIII, 2 | die in large numbers when men engaged in transporting 63 VIII, 4 | consequently, at times men hunt for snakes by pouring 64 VIII, 12| temperature, and, just as men seek shelter in houses in 65 VIII, 12| houses in winter, or as men of great possessions spend 66 VIII, 12| reality a race of dwarfish men, and the horses are little 67 VIII, 12| little in proportion, and the men live in caves underground. 68 VIII, 19| general rule what is good for men is good for fishes also.~ 69 IX, 1 | orderly fashion on the ground. Men hunt the elephant in the 70 IX, 7 | swallow. In the same way as men do, the bird mixes mud and 71 IX, 12 | they fly out to sea, and men, when sailing past the coast 72 IX, 30 | protection against animals and men.~The so-called goat-sucker 73 IX, 36 | called that of Cedripolis, men hunt for little birds in 74 IX, 36 | with the aid of hawks. The men with sticks in their hands 75 IX, 36 | frighten them down. The men then strike them with their 76 IX, 40 | noise; and consequently men say that they can muster 77 IX, 41 | in holes underground; for men when ploughing or digging 78 IX, 50 | The case is the same with men: if you mutilate them in 79 IX, 50 | to quadrupeds, birds, and men.~