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Alphabetical    [«  »]
leg 13
leg-bones 1
legend 1
legs 62
leguminous 1
leisure 1
leisurely 1
Frequency    [«  »]
62 away
62 fat
62 honey
62 legs
62 right
61 places
61 season
Aristotle
The History of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

legs

   Book,  Paragraph
1 I, 7 | thorax, two arms and two legs.~Of the parts of which the 2 I, 15 | correspond; and that the legs correspond to the arms, 3 I, 15 | and, lastly, the feet.~The legs bend frontwards, in the 4 I, 15 | formed by bent arms and legs are practically face to 5 II, 1 | indistinctly defined, and its front legs are much bigger than its 6 II, 1 | observed in the arms and legs of man; with the exception 7 II, 1 | viviparous quadrupeds the front legs bend forwards and the hind 8 II, 1 | assert, but it bends its legs and settles down; only that 9 II, 1 | sleep. And it bends its hind legs just as a man bends his 10 II, 1 | just as a man bends his legs.~In the case of the ovipara, 11 II, 1 | the like, both pairs of legs, fore and hind, bend forwards, 12 II, 1 | multipeds; only that the legs in between the extreme ends 13 II, 1 | man bends his arms and his legs towards the same point, 14 II, 1 | inclination inwards, and his legs frontwards. No animal bends 15 II, 1 | bipeds, they bend their legs backwards, and instead of 16 II, 1 | instead of arms or front legs have wings which bend frontwards.~ 17 II, 1 | sore, with sandals.~The legs of all quadrupeds are bony, 18 II, 1 | huckle-bone have it in the hinder legs. They have also the bone 19 II, 1 | that have feet the hind legs are to be rated as the lower 20 II, 8 | hair, and it bends these legs like man, with the convexities 21 II, 10 | and under parts, the front legs and hind legs, and the part 22 II, 10 | the front legs and hind legs, and the part analogous 23 II, 11 | but the flexure of the legs is the same in both creatures. 24 II, 12 | quadrupeds bend their hind legs, as was noticed previously. 25 II, 12 | short-tailed birds fly with their legs stretched out at full length. 26 II, 14 | greater numbers and with legs of more delicate structure. 27 II, 17 | length and to be devoid of legs. That is to say, the serpent 28 III, 2 | The veins that run to the legs split at the juncture of 29 III, 2 | split at the juncture of the legs with the trunk and extend 30 III, 3 | loins and passes on to the legs, after which it goes on 31 III, 4 | pass on down through the legs and terminate in the feet 32 III, 7 | are destitute of arms and legs cannot be furnished with 33 IV, 1 | congeners in the length of its legs and in having one row of 34 IV, 2 | squilla; it has four front legs on either side, then three 35 IV, 4 | after these two bifurcate legs or claws, whereby it draws 36 IV, 4 | towards itself, and two other legs on either side, and a third 37 IV, 4 | is not discernible. The legs and the thorax are hard, 38 IV, 4 | but not so hard as the legs and the thorax of the crab. 39 IV, 7 | jumping have the hinder legs the longer; and these long 40 IV, 10 | red-blooded and provided with legs give sensible proof that 41 v, 2 | and straddles with her legs, and the male mounts and 42 v, 22 | and bees’ bread round its legs, but vomits the honey into 43 VI, 22 | forty years old: his fore legs had to be lifted up for 44 VI, 30 | smooth and blind, and its legs and most of its organs are 45 VI, 35 | withstanding the shortness of its legs it is exceptionally fleet 46 VI, 37 | two hind-legs; their front legs are small and their hind-legs 47 VII, 4 | subject to swellings of the legs and eruptions on the body. 48 VIII, 3 | of a stork, only that its legs are shorter; it is web-footed 49 VIII, 5 | can walk erect on its hind legs. All the flesh it eats it 50 VIII, 21| subject to measles about the legs, neck, and shoulders, for 51 VIII, 24| the animal walks with its legs stretched out straight. 52 VIII, 28| span long and its front legs the length of the first 53 IX, 21 | is long and slender; its legs are short, like those of 54 IX, 39 | colour, with long front legs; it is heavy in its movements, 55 IX, 39 | smaller. The one has long legs and keeps watch while swinging 56 IX, 40 | they do the wax on their legs.~Very remarkable diversity 57 IX, 40 | bees-wax with their front legs; the front legs wipe it 58 IX, 40 | their front legs; the front legs wipe it off on to the middle 59 IX, 40 | it off on to the middle legs, and these pass it on to 60 IX, 44 | their tail between their legs, like a dog. A lion was 61 IX, 45 | other horned animals. Its legs are hairy; it is cloven-footed, 62 IX, 50 | being hung up by the hind legs, it is operated on; they


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