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Alphabetical [« »] tolerably 3 tomb 1 tone 3 tongue 60 tongue-like 1 tongue-shaped 1 tongues 1 | Frequency [« »] 61 season 61 situated 60 bee 60 tongue 58 exception 58 further 58 gets | Aristotle The History of Animals IntraText - Concordances tongue |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 11 | sensible of taste is the tongue. The sensation has its seat 2 I, 11 | its seat at the tip of the tongue; if the object to be tasted 3 I, 11 | sensibly experienced. The tongue is sensitive in all other 4 I, 11 | can appreciate taste. The tongue is sometimes broad, sometimes 5 I, 11 | of taste. Moreover, the tongue is sometimes loosely hung, 6 I, 11 | mumble and who lisp.~The tongue consists of flesh, soft 7 I, 15 | eyes, the nostrils, and the tongue, all alike are situated 8 I, 16 | the mouth; the end of the tongue is attached to the epiglottis. 9 II, 6 | 6~The tongue of the elephant is exceedingly 10 II, 10 | of sensation, including a tongue, with the exception of the 11 II, 10 | rule, fishes have a prickly tongue, not free in its movements; 12 II, 10 | undifferentiated surface where the tongue should be, until you open 13 II, 12 | in the structure of its tongue; for the creature can protrude 14 II, 12 | creature can protrude its tongue to the extent of four finger-breadths, 15 II, 12 | All are furnished with a tongue, but the organ is variable, 16 II, 13 | cases are placed on the tongue. The tongue is hard and 17 II, 13 | placed on the tongue. The tongue is hard and spiny, and so 18 II, 15 | underneath the root of the tongue and in the neighbourhood 19 II, 17 | close to the mouth that the tongue appears to be underneath 20 II, 17 | seems to project over the tongue, owing to the fact that 21 II, 17 | owing to the fact that the tongue draws back into a sheath 22 II, 17 | as in other animals. The tongue, moreover, is thin and long 23 II, 17 | exceptional property in the tongue, that it is forked at the 24 II, 17 | serpent, for the tips of his tongue are as thin as hairs. The 25 II, 17 | by the way, has a split tongue.~The stomach of the serpent 26 III, 11 | and in the cuticle of the tongue.~In some cases among men 27 IV, 1 | nature, and this it uses as a tongue, for no other tongue does 28 IV, 1 | as a tongue, for no other tongue does it possess. Next after 29 IV, 2 | structure serving for a tongue; and the stomach is close 30 IV, 2 | substance, shaped like a tongue. After the mouth comes a 31 IV, 4 | and the organ resembling a tongue; but these organs, in the 32 IV, 5 | serving the office of a tongue. Next to this comes the 33 IV, 7 | insects have a kind of a tongue corresponding to a similar 34 IV, 8 | the organ of taste, the tongue. Of aquatic red-blooded 35 IV, 8 | organ of taste, namely the tongue, but it is in an imperfect 36 IV, 8 | might be mistaken for a tongue.~There is no doubt but that 37 IV, 9 | the instrumentality of the tongue. Thus, the voice and larynx 38 IV, 9 | consonantal sounds are made by the tongue and the lips; and out of 39 IV, 9 | Consequently, animals that have no tongue at all or that have a tongue 40 IV, 9 | tongue at all or that have a tongue not freely detached, have 41 IV, 9 | by other organs than the tongue.~Insects, for instance, 42 IV, 9 | and a windpipe; but its tongue is not loose, nor has it 43 IV, 9 | which are furnished with tongue and lung, the oviparous 44 IV, 9 | tortoise. The formation of the tongue in the frog is exceptional. 45 IV, 9 | exceptional. The front part of the tongue, which in other animals 46 IV, 9 | articulate best as have the tongue moderately flat, and also 47 IV, 9 | control, at first, over the tongue; but it is so far imperfect, 48 v, 5 | wide open and protrude the tongue in the process of coition.)~ 49 v, 15 | protruding the so-called tongue underneath the operculum. 50 v, 15 | underneath the operculum. The tongue of the murex is bigger than 51 v, 22 | the organ that resembles a tongue and carries off to the hive.~ 52 VI, 10 | egg-shell resembles the tongue of a bagpipe, and hair-like 53 VI, 19 | veins are under the ram’s tongue; the lambs are white if 54 VIII, 11| omnivorous; such as have a tongue feed on liquids only, extracting 55 VIII, 12| bird, and the glottis has a tongue that can project far out 56 VIII, 12| is said to have a man’s tongue, answers to this description; 57 VIII, 21| lance the under part of the tongue.~Pigs with flabby flesh 58 VIII, 21| on the under side of the tongue, and if you pluck the bristles 59 IX, 9 | it licks them up with its tongue, which is large and flat. 60 IX, 15 | the outer extremity of the tongue is not sharp-pointed.~The