Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
sullen 1
sum 1
summed 1
summer 77
summer-sleep 1
summer-time 3
sun 16
Frequency    [«  »]
79 takes
79 womb
77 lays
77 summer
76 within
75 common
75 latter
Aristotle
The History of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

summer

   Book,  Paragraph
1 I, 1 | only after rainy weather in summer; for this is the time when 2 IV, 6 | articles of food, but in summer weather they are worthless, 3 v, 8 | winter is changing into summer. And this is the season 4 v, 8 | winter, and the female in summer.~With birds the far greater 5 v, 8 | during the spring and early summer, with the exception of the 6 v, 9 | but the gull lays in the summer, and the diver at the beginning 7 v, 9 | breeds at the beginning of summer, and lays five or six eggs; 8 v, 11 | breed both in winter and in summer, as was previously observed: 9 v, 11 | tunny, about the time of the summer solstice; and the tunny 10 v, 11 | or shoal-fishes breed in summer.~Of the grey mullets, the 11 v, 11 | has been said, are so in summer, in autumn, or in winter. 12 v, 13 | pigeon breeds all through the summer, and as is seen in the barn-door 13 v, 13 | they breed only in the summer. The spring brood is the 14 v, 13 | produce of the hot season, the summer brood, is the poorest of 15 v, 14 | beginning of winter; and the summer litter the poorest, consisting 16 v, 17 | keep in near to land, in summer they keep in deep water; 17 v, 19 | Bosphorus, about the time of the summer solstice, there are brought 18 v, 22 | and this they do in the summer and autumn; and, by the 19 v, 28 | its eggs at the close of summer, and dies after laying them. 20 v, 28 | and with the coming of summer the last year’s larva develops 21 v, 30 | husk is broken. When the summer solstice comes, the creature 22 v, 33 | the spring, in others in summer time, and in others in the 23 VI, 2 | brooding hens more rapidly in summer than in winter; that is 24 VI, 2 | hatch in eighteen days in summer, but occasionally in winter 25 VI, 2 | are produced chiefly in summer. Wind-eggs are called by 26 VI, 7 | only for a short time in summer, and in winter disappears. 27 VI, 12 | It brings forth its young summer, and never at any other 28 VI, 13 | comes at the beginning of summer. Oysters and the small fish 29 VI, 17 | is at different times, in summer with some, and with others 30 VI, 17 | usually at the beginning of summer, but occasionally in the 31 VI, 17 | the anthias, spawns in the summer. Next in order of spawning 32 VI, 17 | spawn for the most part in summer; which fact is proved by 33 VI, 17 | full-grown tunny the next summer. They are of opinion that 34 VI, 35 | at the beginning of the summer. There is an account given 35 VIII, 2 | If they are removed in summer from the pools to the tanks 36 VIII, 3 | the turtledove only in the summer, for in winter it lurks 37 VIII, 3 | come to us in the early summer and build their nests here, 38 VIII, 10| salt every five days in summer, to the extent of one medimnus 39 VIII, 12| possessions spend their summer in cool places and their 40 VIII, 12| land in quest of heat; in summer they shift from shallow 41 VIII, 12| plains for warmth, and in summer migrate to the hills for 42 VIII, 13| tunny is out of season in summer, when it is being preyed 43 VIII, 13| the Euxine, but passes the summer in the Propontis, where 44 VIII, 13| penetrate into the Euxine in summer and pass the summer there; 45 VIII, 13| Euxine in summer and pass the summer there; as do also the greater 46 VIII, 15| for the table during the summer or winter sleep.~The primas-tunny 47 VIII, 15| however, hide during the summer, as the glaucus or grey-back; 48 VIII, 15| grey-back; this fish hides in summer for about sixty days. The 49 VIII, 15| infer that fishes hide in summer from the circumstance that 50 VIII, 19| migrate to the Euxine for the summer; for owing to the number 51 VIII, 19| are chiefly benefited by summer rain; or we may state the 52 VIII, 19| good for fishes in spring, summer, and autumn, and fine dry 53 VIII, 19| the acharnas suffers in summer, and loses condition. The 54 VIII, 19| north wind prevails, and in summer at one and the same spot 55 VIII, 20| Another method is adopted in summer and winter alike. They run 56 VIII, 28| more in wintertime than in summer: for they acquire the habit 57 VIII, 28| habit of not drinking in summer, owing to the circumstance 58 IX, 7 | their beaks. Turtle-doves in summer live in cold places, (and 59 IX, 7 | affect warm habitations in summer and cold ones in winter.~ 60 IX, 11 | method of hunting, for in summer they do not grab their prey 61 IX, 15 | changes its appearance in summer and in winter, as in fact 62 IX, 16 | any other bird, sits in summer in a shady spot facing the 63 IX, 22 | appearance about the time of the summer solstice, and departs again 64 IX, 37 | the return of the early summer they all swim back again. 65 IX, 37 | their prime in the early summer until the spawning time; 66 IX, 37 | sexual union; in the early summer they come swimming in, and 67 IX, 37 | little octopuses in the late summer or beginning of autumn, 68 IX, 40 | trim, and by preference in summer, they set to work, and when 69 IX, 40 | hive. They feed on honey summer and winter; but they store 70 IX, 40 | better than the red. In summer the place for the hive should 71 IX, 41 | follows. At the approach of summer, when the leaders have found 72 IX, 44 | not the same as it is in summer; in summer the animal is 73 IX, 44 | same as it is in summer; in summer the animal is smooth-haired, 74 IX, 49B| note gets altered, for in summer it has a musical note and 75 IX, 49B| speckles like a starling, in summer distinctly spotted: however, 76 IX, 49B| but not continuously. As summer advances it has a different 77 IX, 49B| winter bird, the latter a summer one, and the difference


IntraText® (V89) Copyright 1996-2007 EuloTech SRL