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Alphabetical    [«  »]
vegetables 4
vegetation 2
vegetation-for 1
vein 69
vein-ducts 2
vein-like 1
vein-system 1
Frequency    [«  »]
69 now
69 similar
69 spawn
69 vein
68 near
68 smaller
67 hard
Aristotle
The History of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

vein

   Book,  Paragraph
1 I, 1 | are such as sinew, skin, vein, hair, bone, gristle, nail, 2 I, 4 | These parts are blood and vein, and in other animals there 3 I, 11| so with the palate, and a vein extends from the brain towards 4 I, 11| lies at the end of a little vein. Of animals possessed of 5 I, 16| attached also to the great vein and to what is designated 6 I, 16| is attached to the great vein and the aorta, and there 7 I, 17| fastens on to the great vein and the aorta. It lies with 8 I, 17| connexion with the great vein (near which the mesentery 9 I, 17| With regard to the great vein and the aorta we shall, 10 I, 17| branches from the great vein. Those who imagine it to 11 I, 17| is attached to the great vein, but it has no communication 12 I, 17| with the aorta; for the vein that goes off from the great 13 I, 17| goes off from the great vein goes right through the liver, 14 I, 17| connected only with the great vein, for a vein extends to the 15 I, 17| with the great vein, for a vein extends to the spleen off 16 I, 17| kidneys both from the great vein and from the aorta, only 17 I, 17| attached a hollow sinewy vein, stretching right along 18 III, 1 | betwixt them and the great vein, from which ducts or blood-vessels 19 III, 2 | blood, and its habitat the vein; next in degree of universality, 20 III, 2 | two, one being termed the vein splenitis, and the other 21 III, 2 | splenitis, and the other the vein hepatitis. Each of the pair 22 III, 2 | neck running along the big vein on either side, slightly 23 III, 3 | the left; and by some this vein is termed the "aorta", from 24 III, 3 | there is not perforation and vein; for the extremities are 25 III, 3 | dishonest wound;~The hollow vein that to the neck extends,~ 26 III, 3 | with the heart, the entire vein branches off in two directions. 27 III, 3 | off to the neck the great vein run alongside the windpipe; 28 III, 3 | previous branching off of the vein at the bend of the arm, 29 III, 3 | fingers. (See diagram.)~Each vein of the other pair stretches 30 III, 3 | destitute of blood, and no vein, great or small, holds its 31 III, 3 | from the last mentioned vein some envelop the head, others 32 III, 4 | the branches from the big vein; only that, in regard to 33 III, 4 | than are those of the great vein. So much for the veins as 34 III, 4 | heart.~The part of the great vein that lies underneath the 35 III, 4 | communications. From it one vein, short and wide, extends 36 III, 4 | and disappear. From the vein that passes through the 37 III, 4 | when the surgeon opens this vein in the forearm, the patient 38 III, 4 | extends a short but thick vein to the spleen and the little 39 III, 4 | left-hand side of the great vein, and ascends, by a course 40 III, 4 | only that the ascending vein in the one case is the vein 41 III, 4 | vein in the one case is the vein that traverses the liver, 42 III, 4 | it is distinct from the vein that runs into the spleen. 43 III, 4 | branch off from the big vein; one to the omentum, and 44 III, 4 | the pancreas, from which vein run a number of veins through 45 III, 4 | coalesce in a single large vein, along the entire gut and 46 III, 4 | undivided, the aorta and the big vein extend; and here they get 47 III, 4 | into a A shape, and the big vein gets to the rear of the 48 III, 4 | extend thither from the big vein, only that the branches 49 III, 4 | the kidneys from the big vein and the aorta; only that 50 III, 4 | communicating with the big vein. From the centre of each 51 III, 4 | springs a hollow sinewy vein, running along the backbone 52 III, 4 | to the womb. From the big vein no vein extends to the womb, 53 III, 4 | womb. From the big vein no vein extends to the womb, but 54 III, 4 | the aorta and the great vein at the points of divarication 55 III, 4 | But in all cases the big vein is plainly discernible, 56 III, 5 | the aorta is a sinew-like vein; in fact, at its extremity 57 III, 5 | substantially composed of it. Now, vein may be submitted to the 58 III, 6 | intermediate between sinew and vein. Some of them are supplied 59 III, 6 | they pass from sinew to vein and from vein to sinew. 60 III, 6 | from sinew to vein and from vein to sinew. There is another 61 III, 6 | Such are the properties of vein, sinew, and fibrous tissue.~ 62 III, 15| the properties, then, of vein, sinew and skin, of fibre 63 III, 16| the case with sinew and vein. When animals are subjected 64 v, 15| bloom. There is a kind of vein that runs through it, and 65 VI, 3 | from the heart and the big vein), so as to keep the embryo 66 VI, 3 | with the heart and the big vein. At this conjuncture the 67 VI, 11| the midriff and the great vein. About this period the sperm-ducts 68 VII, 8 | to the womb itself by a vein in all such as have the 69 VII, 8 | the direction of the great vein, and the other two run in


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