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Alphabetical [« »] sheep-dogs 1 sheepfold 1 sheer 4 shell 70 shell-covered 1 shell-fish 11 shell-fish-for 1 | Frequency [« »] 71 known 71 wild 70 sea 70 shell 70 what 69 get 69 itself | Aristotle The History of Animals IntraText - Concordances shell |
Book, Paragraph
1 IV, 1 | polypus" egg’; and the shell of this creature is something 2 IV, 1 | circumstances it is found with its shell detached, and dies by and 3 IV, 1 | that is placed within a shell like a snail; it never comes 4 IV, 1 | it never comes out of the shell, but lives inside the shell 5 IV, 1 | shell, but lives inside the shell like the snail, and from 6 IV, 4 | inside the animal, and the shell is outside, and there is 7 IV, 4 | enclosed within a single shell, and in these last the fleshy 8 IV, 4 | are entirely enveloped in shell and expose no portion of 9 IV, 4 | thickness or thinness of their shell, both as regards the shell 10 IV, 4 | shell, both as regards the shell in its entirety and as regards 11 IV, 4 | regards specific parts of the shell, for instance, the lips; 12 IV, 4 | substance adheres to the shell so tenaciously that it can 13 IV, 4 | the spiral twist of the shell in the part farthest away 14 IV, 4 | extrudes from the mouth of the shell, hard and stiff; some more, 15 IV, 4 | innermost recess of the shell. All these statements may 16 IV, 4 | within the whorl of the shell. What comes next to the 17 IV, 4 | down in the bottom of the shell, and the bivalves at the 18 IV, 4 | residuum issues beneath the shell, for the shell is perforated 19 IV, 4 | beneath the shell, for the shell is perforated to give an 20 IV, 4 | introducing itself into a shell and living there it resembles 21 IV, 4 | It does not adhere to its shell like the purple murex and 22 IV, 4 | longer when found in the shell of the stromboids than when 23 IV, 4 | stromboids than when found in the shell of the neritae.~And, by 24 IV, 4 | the animal found in the shell of the neritae is a separate 25 IV, 4 | has a smooth large round shell, and resembles the ceryx 26 IV, 4 | bivalves is a duplicate shell. The interior of the animal 27 IV, 5 | near to the back of the shell. The urchin has, also, five 28 IV, 5 | the anal vent, where the shell is perforated for an outlet. 29 IV, 6 | body concealed within its shell, and the shell is a substance 30 IV, 6 | within its shell, and the shell is a substance intermediate 31 IV, 6 | intermediate between hide and shell, so that it cuts like a 32 IV, 6 | attached to rocks by its shell, and is provided with two 33 IV, 6 | visible excretion (whereas of shell fish in general some resemble 34 IV, 6 | lead outwards through the shell; and here it discharges 35 IV, 6 | relaxes its hold. It has no shell, but its entire body is 36 IV, 6 | rock as an oyster to its shell. If any little fish come 37 IV, 7 | sepia-bone, nor enveloping shell; but their body by its hardness 38 v, 15 | they first strip off the shell and then abstract the bloom. 39 v, 15 | spiral convolution of the shell.~The mussel also constructs 40 v, 15 | the bloom is outside the shell on the surface. These creatures 41 v, 15 | grows it shifts to a larger shell, as for instance into the 42 v, 15 | as for instance into the shell of the nerites, or of the 43 v, 15 | and very often into the shell of the small ceryx. After 44 v, 15 | ceryx. After entering new shell, it carries it about, and 45 v, 17 | their worst.~They cast their shell in the spring-time (just 46 v, 19 | called a chrysalis. The outer shell is hard, and the chrysalis 47 v, 19 | motionless, but after a while the shell bursts and the stag-beetle 48 v, 32 | head projects outside its shell, mottled in colour, and 49 v, 32 | the tunic, for just as the shell is with the body of the 50 v, 32 | grub as the removal of the shell would be to the snail. In 51 v, 33 | tortoise lays eggs with a hard shell and of two colours within, 52 VI, 3 | the egg, not that of the shell, but underneath it. Inside 53 VI, 3 | chick begins to break the shell. The head is situated over 54 VI, 3 | outermost membrane of the shell, into which membrane the 55 VI, 10 | that lies close under the shell, while it does exhibit that 56 VI, 10 | ducts are attached to the shell. With the dog-fish which 57 VIII, 2 | clings corresponds to the shell which encases the other.~ 58 VIII, 17| is shell-like, as is the shell of the tortoise-for, by 59 VIII, 17| the thorax soft, from the shell having there peeled off, 60 VIII, 17| lower parts hard, from the shell having not yet peeled off 61 VIII, 17| these animals slough their shell becomes soft all over, and 62 VIII, 20| another, as there grows on the shell a kind of sea-weed or sea-moss; 63 IX, 9 | third peck it split the shell of the fruit, and then ate 64 IX, 37 | that they make a thin rough shell about them like a hard sheath, 65 IX, 37 | surface; it rises with its shell down-turned in order that 66 IX, 37 | shifts the position of the shell. In between its feelers 67 IX, 37 | frightened it fills its shell with water and sinks. With 68 IX, 37 | generation and the growth of the shell knowledge from observation 69 IX, 37 | not yet satisfactory; the shell, however, does not appear 70 IX, 37 | live when stripped of the shell.~