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Alphabetical [« »] hornless 1 horns 58 horny 5 horse 74 horse-flesh 1 horse-fly 3 horse-mackerel 1 | Frequency [« »] 75 she 75 substance 75 together 74 horse 73 belly 73 towards 72 membrane | Aristotle The History of Animals IntraText - Concordances horse |
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1 I, 1 | and in like manner with a horse, and with all other animals 2 I, 1 | surface of the ground, as the horse and the dog. make to themselves 3 I, 4 | with blood, as man, the horse, and all such animals as 4 I, 5 | viviparous, such as man, the horse, the seal, and all other 5 I, 5 | live foetus, as man and the horse. When the result of conception 6 I, 6 | we say man, lion, stag, horse, dog, and so on; though, 7 I, 6 | bushy tails, such as the horse, the ass, the mule, the 8 II, 1 | as in the case with the horse, the mule, and, among the 9 II, 1 | solid-hooved animals, the horse and the mule. Swine are 10 II, 1 | is the case with man, the horse, and most other creatures; 11 II, 1 | the wild boar nor in the horse.~The penis of the elephant 12 II, 1 | elephant resembles that of the horse; compared with the size 13 II, 1 | bushy-tailed animals such as the horse; for in their case there 14 II, 1 | opposing crowns, as the horse and the ox; and by "saw-toothed" 15 II, 1 | do other animals, as the horse, the mule, and the ass. 16 II, 3 | In this particular, the horse differs entirely from animals 17 II, 3 | teeth get blacker, but the horse’s teeth grow whiter with 18 II, 7 | hippopotamus has a mane like a horse, is cloven-footed like an 19 II, 7 | of a pig, the neigh of a horse, and the dimensions of an 20 II, 7 | organs it resembles the horse and the ass.)~ 21 II, 15 | heart. And, by the way, the horse’s heart also has a bone 22 II, 15 | organ, as also the roe, the horse, the mule, the ass, the 23 III, 1 | man, the dog, the pig, the horse, and the ox; the same is 24 III, 11 | obviously as in the case of the horse. Hair turns grey from the 25 III, 20 | have hair, as man and the horse; and the cetaceans, as the 26 v, 14 | months, but not before. The horse and the mare are, at the 27 v, 14 | although, by the way, a horse has known to live to the 28 VI, 18 | comes near him; as for a horse, a camel is ready to fight 29 VI, 18 | phenomena connected with the horse.~Cows go a-bulling; and 30 VI, 21 | together but just as the horse sheds his. When the animal 31 VI, 22 | oxen. In both sexes the horse is the most salacious of 32 VI, 22 | unnatural and portentous.~The horse then is first fitted for 33 VI, 22 | process of shedding.~The horse has forty teeth. It sheds 34 VI, 22 | instance has occurred where a horse shed all his teeth at once, 35 VI, 22 | and another instance of a horse shedding all his teeth with 36 VI, 22 | consequently happens that a horse when four and a half years 37 VI, 22 | posture casts its foal.~The horse in general lives for eighteen 38 VI, 22 | or even thirty, and if a horse be treated with extreme 39 VI, 22 | the age of fifty years; a horse, however, when it reaches 40 VI, 22 | suck for a longer period.~Horse and mule are at their best 41 VI, 22 | and small.~The male of the horse will breed at all seasons 42 VI, 22 | life; the mare can take the horse all its life long, but is 43 VI, 22 | operation.~Mares first take the horse in the spring-time. After 44 VI, 22 | mare has been covered by a horse, the ass will destroy the 45 VI, 22 | Horse-trainers do not appoint a horse as leader to a troop, as 46 VI, 22 | for this reason that the horse is not steady but quick-tempered 47 VI, 23 | previously begotten by the horse; but, after the mare has 48 VI, 23 | covered by the ass, the horse supervening will not spoil 49 VI, 23 | there is a cross between a horse and a she-ass or a jackass 50 VI, 23 | the ass, nor a she ass the horse, unless the ass or she-ass 51 VI, 36 | as the cross between the horse and ass, but resembles it 52 VIII, 5 | wolf, with a mane like a horse, only that the hair is stiffer 53 VIII, 6 | drink by suction, as the horse and the ox; the bear neither 54 VIII, 8 | water for drinking; but the horse in this respect resembles 55 VIII, 24| stretched out straight. The horse suffers also from abscesses. 56 VIII, 24| during this ailment the horse be mounted, it will run 57 VIII, 24| according to experts, the horse and the sheep have pretty 58 VIII, 24| extremely injurious to a horse, and to all draught animals; 59 VIII, 24| for the diseases of the horse.~The so-called hippomanes 60 VIII, 24| before the foal appears.~A horse will recognize the neighing 61 VIII, 24| the neighing of any other horse with which it may have fought 62 VIII, 24| any previous period. The horse delights in meadows and 63 VIII, 24| if water be clear, the horse will trample in it to make 64 VIII, 24| ox is the opposite of the horse; for if the water be impure 65 IX, 1 | general war all round. The horse and the anthus are enemies, 66 IX, 1 | anthus are enemies, and the horse will drive the bird out 67 IX, 1 | mimics the whinnying of the horse, flies at him, and tries 68 IX, 1 | frighten him away; but the horse drives the bird away, and 69 IX, 40 | large animals; in fact, a horse has been known to have been 70 IX, 45 | shoulder, as that of the horse reaches down to its withers; 71 IX, 45 | softer than the hair in the horse’s mane, and clings more 72 IX, 45 | of the so-called chestnut horse, but rougher. It has an 73 IX, 47 | purpose; that the young horse declined; that, after the 74 IX, 47 | rendered visible, the young horse ran way and hurled himself