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Alphabetical    [«  »]
horned 19
hornet 2
hornless 1
horns 58
horny 5
horse 74
horse-flesh 1
Frequency    [«  »]
58 exception
58 further
58 gets
58 horns
58 left
58 well
57 fly
Aristotle
The History of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

horns

   Book,  Paragraph
1 II, 1 | Both these animals have horns and are cloven-footed; the 2 II, 1 | of the hippelaphus has no horns. This latter animal resembles 3 II, 1 | hook-nosed muzzle, and with horns lying more over the back. 4 II, 1 | more over the back. The horns of the hippelaphus resemble 5 II, 1 | solid-hooved animal with a pair of horns has never yet been met with. 6 II, 1 | outside, and the keraiae or "horns" on the top. This, then, 7 II, 1 | furnished also with a pair of horns bent in towards one another, 8 II, 1 | figure of speech, to have horns; just as the Egyptians describe 9 II, 1 | and solid throughout. The horns of other animals are hollow 10 II, 1 | as is the case with the horns of oxen. The deer is the 11 II, 1 | only animal that sheds its horns, and it does so annually, 12 II, 1 | other animals retain their horns permanently, unless the 13 II, 1 | permanently, unless the horns be damaged by accident.~ 14 II, 1 | possesses both tusks and horns, nor yet do either of these 15 III, 1 | the so-called ceratia, or horns, the wombs of most animals 16 III, 1 | narrow part between the two horns running up as far as the 17 III, 9 | nails, hooves, claws, and horns; and also, by the way, beaks, 18 III, 9 | frangible.~And the colours of horns and nails and claw and hoof 19 III, 9 | of medium hue, so are the horns, the claws, or the hooves, 20 III, 9 | like the whole of the skin.~Horns in general are hollow at 21 III, 9 | alone of all animals the horns are solid throughout, and 22 III, 9 | animal is known to shed its horns, the deer sheds its horns 23 III, 9 | horns, the deer sheds its horns annually, unless it has 24 III, 9 | have much to say hereafter. Horns attach rather to the skin 25 III, 9 | cattle that can move their horns as freely as their ears.~ 26 III, 15 | nail, claw and hoof, of horns, of teeth, of beak, of gristle, 27 IV, 4 | protrudes the head and two horns, and these horns are large 28 IV, 4 | and two horns, and these horns are large in the large species, 29 IV, 4 | They all have a head and horns, and a mouth, and the organ 30 IV, 4 | spider. It has two thin red horns, and underneath these horns 31 IV, 4 | horns, and underneath these horns two long eyes, not retreating 32 IV, 11 | offence, such as teeth, tusks, horns, spurs, and the like, these 33 IV, 11 | instance, the hind has no horns, and where the cock-bird 34 v, 19 | grub, which has as it were horns, and in other respects differs 35 VI, 10 | shift into each of the two horns of the womb and descend, 36 VIII, 2 | as rams fight with their horns, raising them and striking 37 VIII, 5 | seizes hold of the bull’s horns with its front paws, fastens 38 VIII, 7 | wallowing in warm waters. If the horns of young cattle be smeared 39 VIII, 28| long-horned ram is born with horns, and not the ram only, as 40 VIII, 28| Scythia, the ram is without horns.~In Egypt animals, as a 41 IX, 5 | capture. They shed their horns in places difficult of access 42 IX, 5 | where the stag sheds his horns"; the fact being that, as 43 IX, 5 | first year stags grow no horns, but only an excrescence 44 IX, 5 | excrescence indicating where horns will be, this excrescence 45 IX, 5 | second year they grow their horns for the first time, straight 46 IX, 5 | after this they grow their horns without any specific differentiation, 47 IX, 5 | forward-pointing tips of the growing horns (that is to say the brow 48 IX, 5 | upwards. Stags shed their horns annually, in or about the 49 IX, 5 | until they have grown their horns, they feed at night-time. 50 IX, 5 | feed at night-time. The horns at first grow in a kind 51 IX, 5 | green ivy grown over its horns, it having grown apparently, 52 IX, 5 | fresh green wood, when the horns were young and tender. When 53 IX, 45 | the bellow of a bull. Its horns are crooked, turned inwards 54 IX, 50 | age, they have as yet no horns, they never grow horns at 55 IX, 50 | no horns, they never grow horns at all; if they be mutilated 56 IX, 50 | mutilated when they have horns, the horns remain unchanged 57 IX, 50 | when they have horns, the horns remain unchanged in size, 58 IX, 50 | to the two divisions (or horns) of the womb; they cut off


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