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Alphabetical    [«  »]
melts 1
member 3
members 4
membrane 72
membrane-like 1
membrane-winged 1
membranes 11
Frequency    [«  »]
74 horse
73 belly
73 towards
72 membrane
72 neither
72 themselves
72 times
Aristotle
The History of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

membrane

   Book,  Paragraph
1 I, 16 | brain-caul is that skin-like membrane which closely surrounds 2 I, 16 | and consists of a fatty membrane, as is the case with all 3 I, 17 | provided with a fatty and thick membrane where it fastens on to the 4 I, 17 | the backbone, with a thin membrane in the middle of it. It 5 III, 1 | enveloped in one and the same membrane, so that, until you draw 6 III, 1 | until you draw aside the membrane, they present all the appearance 7 III, 1 | In the larger birds the membrane is more distinctly visible, 8 III, 2 | and then, again, skin, membrane, sinew, hair, nails, and 9 III, 3 | looks as though made of membrane or skin, while the aorta 10 III, 3 | the so-called meninx, or membrane, which surrounds the brain. 11 III, 13 | membranes are found. And membrane resembles a thin close-textured 12 III, 13 | cleavage nor of extension. Membrane envelops each one of the 13 III, 13 | order of magnitude comes the membrane that encloses the heart. 14 III, 13 | that encloses the heart. If membrane be bared and cut asunder 15 III, 13 | bone thus stripped of its membrane mortifies.~ 16 III, 14 | or caul, by the way, is membrane. All sanguineous animals 17 III, 15 | also is of the nature of membrane, but of membrane peculiar 18 III, 15 | nature of membrane, but of membrane peculiar in kind, for it 19 III, 15 | The bladder, like ordinary membrane, if cut asunder will not 20 III, 15 | sinew and skin, of fibre and membrane, of hair, nail, claw and 21 IV, 1 | under-surface of its arms, and the membrane in between its feet is kept 22 IV, 1 | enveloped in one and the same membrane, and by the same membrane, 23 IV, 1 | membrane, and by the same membrane, same orifice discharges 24 IV, 2 | being enveloped in a thin membrane.~Such are the parts, internal 25 IV, 4 | white duct enveloped in a membrane, resembling in colour the 26 IV, 4 | but is enveloped in a thin membrane with a narrow cavity in 27 IV, 4 | excretion enveloped in a membrane.) The so-called egg has 28 IV, 5 | the stomach, in another membrane, are the so-called eggs, 29 IV, 6 | first place, a tendinous membrane running round inside the 30 IV, 6 | substance, and within this membrane is the flesh-like substance 31 IV, 6 | attached in two places to the membrane and the skin, obliquely; 32 IV, 7 | hypozoma and has in it a membrane quite discernible, whilst 33 IV, 7 | discernible, whilst the membrane is indiscernible in the 34 IV, 9 | special noises by means of the membrane that is underneath the " 35 v, 15 | colour it looks like a white membrane, and this is what people 36 v, 16 | intervene. There is a kind of membrane stretched over the under 37 v, 22 | completed form it breaks its membrane and flies away. It ejects 38 v, 22 | got out of the encasing membrane, as we have already described. 39 v, 24 | produced wrapped in a black membrane. Apart from the membrane 40 v, 24 | membrane. Apart from the membrane there is found some wax 41 v, 28 | sort of thin clay, like a membrane; in this membrane-like formation 42 v, 34 | the viper is born inside a membrane that bursts from off the 43 VI, 2 | white are separated by a membrane from one another. The so-called " 44 VI, 3 | circumjacent integuments); and a membrane carrying bloody fibres now 45 VI, 3 | of veins; one towards the membrane that envelops the yolk ( 46 VI, 3 | and the other towards that membrane which envelops collectively 47 VI, 3 | envelops collectively the membrane wherein the chick lies, 48 VI, 3 | wherein the chick lies, the membrane of the yolk, and the intervening 49 VI, 3 | and outermost comes the membrane of the egg, not that of 50 VI, 3 | underneath it. Inside this membrane is a white liquid; then 51 VI, 3 | then comes the chick, and a membrane round about it, separating 52 VI, 3 | enveloping white substance. (A membrane with a liquid resembling 53 VI, 3 | structure. Then comes another membrane right round the embryo, 54 VI, 3 | yolk, enveloped in another membrane (into which yolk proceeds 55 VI, 3 | is plain to be seen the membrane resembling an after-birth 56 VI, 3 | next after the outermost membrane of the shell, into which 57 VI, 3 | of the shell, into which membrane the one of the navel-strings 58 VI, 3 | and so also is the other membrane resembling an after-birth, 59 VI, 3 | from the chick, and the membrane that leads into the yolk 60 VI, 10 | navel-strings that leads off to the membrane that lies close under the 61 VI, 10 | are enveloped by a common membrane, and just under this is 62 VI, 10 | just under this is another membrane that envelops the embryo 63 VI, 11 | and are attached by a thin membrane. The particulars regarding 64 VI, 13 | egg and is enveloped in a membrane, and the eyes, large and 65 VI, 14 | detaches itself; this is a membrane that envelops the egg and 66 VII, 3 | holds together in a sort of membrane, but if it be placed in 67 VII, 3 | dissolves and disappears. If the membrane be pulled to bits the embryo 68 VII, 7 | remains there for a while, a membrane forms around it; for when 69 VII, 7 | an egg enveloped in its membrane after removal of the eggshell; 70 VII, 7 | of the eggshell; and the membrane is full of veins.~All animals 71 VII, 7 | envelope, and then another membrane appears around the former 72 VIII, 24| called the "polium" or foal’s membrane, is, as all the accounts


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