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Alphabetical [« »] happened 2 happens 18 harbour 2 hard 67 hard-eyed 1 hard-haired 1 hard-shell 1 | Frequency [« »] 69 vein 68 near 68 smaller 67 hard 67 sometimes 66 him 66 oviparous | Aristotle The History of Animals IntraText - Concordances hard |
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1 I, 6 | with a kind of tessellated hard substance; and the tessellated 2 II, 1 | alone has a horn, or antler, hard and solid throughout. The 3 II, 1 | which this is wrapped-the hard part-is derived from the 4 II, 8 | the after end is unusually hard, and in a clumsy obscure 5 II, 13 | the tongue. The tongue is hard and spiny, and so firmly 6 II, 13 | though the eyes are not hard; with regard to the organs 7 II, 17 | most birds is fleshy and hard, and inside is a strong 8 III, 5 | a considerable amount of hard tension. In connexion with 9 III, 7 | the lion are exceptionally hard; so hard, in fact, that 10 III, 7 | are exceptionally hard; so hard, in fact, that if they are 11 III, 7 | that if they are rubbed hard against one another they 12 III, 10 | just as the hair in man is hard in warm places and soft 13 III, 18 | that are not furnished with hard eyes.~Fat animals, whether 14 III, 20 | male and rub their udders hard with nettles to cause an 15 IV, 1 | substance outside, and any hard structure it may happen 16 IV, 1 | animals that have their hard structure outside, and their 17 IV, 1 | substance inside, and the hard substance belonging to them 18 IV, 1 | animals that have their hard substance outside and their 19 IV, 1 | substance within, and their hard substance can be shattered 20 IV, 1 | is to say, their body is hard all through, inside and 21 IV, 1 | the creature is alive, is hard, and looks as though it 22 IV, 1 | teuthis, and the teuthus the hard parts are within, towards 23 IV, 1 | cuttle-fish and teuthus is hard and flat, being a substance 24 IV, 1 | The octopus has nothing hard of this kind in its interior, 25 IV, 1 | animal grows old, becomes hard.~The females differ from 26 IV, 2 | been stated, have their hard and shelly part outside, 27 IV, 2 | all these creatures are hard and beady, and can move 28 IV, 4 | outside, and there is no hard substance in the interior. 29 IV, 4 | the mouth of the shell, hard and stiff; some more, and 30 IV, 4 | legs and the thorax are hard, but not so hard as the 31 IV, 4 | thorax are hard, but not so hard as the legs and the thorax 32 IV, 5 | but furnished with large hard spines; it lives in the 33 IV, 6 | it cuts like a piece of hard leather. It is attached 34 IV, 6 | another, very minute and hard to see, whereby it admits 35 IV, 6 | more edible, and the large hard ones, such as are found 36 IV, 7 | the gadfly this organ is hard, and indeed it is hard in 37 IV, 7 | is hard, and indeed it is hard in most insects. In point 38 IV, 11 | roe or milt; but they are hard and fat all over, and are 39 v, 15 | in rocky places, some on hard and stony ground, and some 40 v, 16 | such as are particularly hard and rough are nicknamed " 41 v, 16 | comparatively soft or comparatively hard. But, by the way, the habitat 42 v, 19 | female of this species lays a hard egg, resembling the seed 43 v, 19 | chrysalis. The outer shell is hard, and the chrysalis moves 44 v, 19 | the water motionless and hard, and by and by the husk 45 v, 24 | is exceedingly thick and hard; in point of fact, one can 46 v, 31 | Pigs breed lice large and hard. In dogs are found the flea 47 v, 33 | tortoise lays eggs with a hard shell and of two colours 48 v, 33 | ground and treads the ground hard over them; it then broods 49 VI, 2 | protrudes, changing from soft to hard with such temporal exactitude 50 VI, 2 | that, whereas it is not hard during the process of protrusion, 51 VI, 3 | sunlight, but there is no hard substance whatsoever. Such 52 VI, 20 | shedding but two and its being hard to hit upon the time when 53 VI, 21 | presents itself becomes as hard as stone when it clots; 54 VI, 22 | pain it is put to by the hard tugging of the young; an 55 VI, 30 | with young, it is a very hard task to catch her.~ 56 VII, 6 | mostly sound, and there is no hard and fast rule regarding 57 VIII, 2 | mouths are extraordinarily hard; whatever object it seizes, 58 VIII, 5 | and the substance of it is hard and dry like the excrement 59 VIII, 15| spawn is small, the fish is hard to catch, but it is easily 60 VIII, 17| off, and the lower parts hard, from the shell having not 61 VIII, 21| Even this disease is very hard to cure; it has been known 62 IX, 1 | courage and endurance of hard labour.~In all cases, excepting 63 IX, 7 | a bed of straw, putting hard material below for a foundation, 64 IX, 12 | of a mischievous nature, hard to capture, but when caught 65 IX, 32 | prevents a stable footing on hard stone. The eagle hunts hares, 66 IX, 37 | shell about them like a hard sheath, and that this is 67 IX, 44 | and its head is especially hard. Whenever it inflicts a