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Alphabetical    [«  »]
skill 2
skimmed 1
skims 1
skin 56
skin-a 1
skin-like 1
skins 1
Frequency    [«  »]
56 land
56 lay
56 make
56 skin
56 were
55 devoid
55 especially
Aristotle
The History of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

skin

   Book,  Paragraph
1 I, 1 | solid are such as sinew, skin, vein, hair, bone, gristle, 2 I, 7 | within a wrapper of fleshless skin.~The skull has sutures: 3 I, 9 | externally; but when the outer skin is removed, it is found 4 I, 9 | in development, and the skin allowed to grow over.~ 5 I, 13 | and round about it is a skin devoid of any specific title, 6 I, 13 | integument of these is a skin that is termed the "scrotum".~ 7 II, 1 | part is derived from the skin, but the core round which 8 II, 10 | nails, and an impenetrable skin composed of scaly plates. 9 II, 11 | and are enveloped in a skin resembling that which covers 10 II, 11 | with them. When the outer skin is drawn aside from off 11 II, 12 | birds blink by means of a skin extending over the eye from 12 II, 13 | fishes, but with one of skin.~Morever, with fishes furnished 13 II, 17 | consists of a large hollow skin, into which the food first 14 II, 17 | and inside is a strong skin which comes away from the 15 III, 2 | gristle; and then, again, skin, membrane, sinew, hair, 16 III, 3 | though made of membrane or skin, while the aorta is narrower 17 III, 9 | follow the colour of the skin and the hair. For according 18 III, 9 | hair. For according as the skin of an animal is black, or 19 III, 9 | black, like the whole of the skin.~Horns in general are hollow 20 III, 9 | Horns attach rather to the skin than to the bone; which 21 III, 10 | analogous to hair, and of skin or hide. All viviparous 22 III, 10 | according to the quality of skin or hide on which it grows. 23 III, 11 | man has the most delicate skin: that is, if we take into 24 III, 11 | his relative size. In the skin or hide of all animals there 25 III, 11 | manufactured from fishes also.) The skin, when cut, is in itself 26 III, 11 | especially the case with the skin on the head, owing to there 27 III, 11 | skull. And wherever the skin is quite by itself, if it 28 III, 11 | eyelid. In all animals the skin is one of the parts that 29 III, 11 | sanguineous animals, then, have skin; but not all such animals 30 III, 11 | diversity to start with in the skin and in the cuticle of the 31 III, 13 | resembles a thin close-textured skin, but its qualities are different, 32 III, 15 | then, of vein, sinew and skin, of fibre and membrane, 33 III, 16 | situated in between the skin and the bone, or the substance 34 III, 17 | fat is found between the skin and flesh, but suet is found 35 III, 20 | membranous structures of the skin~In young animals the marrow 36 IV, 2 | part outside, where the skin is in other animals, and 37 IV, 4 | or gadfly, can pierce the skin of a quadruped, so is that 38 IV, 6 | to the membrane and the skin, obliquely; and at the point 39 IV, 7 | However, insects have a skin; but the skin is exceedingly 40 IV, 7 | insects have a skin; but the skin is exceedingly thin. These 41 IV, 8 | to the thickness of the skin drawn over them, so that 42 v, 28 | grasshopper; by and by, the skin integument strips off, and 43 v, 31 | difficulty in getting the skin rid of it. Boysheads are 44 VI, 25 | drawn back from the jaw, the skin at once goes back to its 45 VIII, 17| applied to the outermost skin, and to the casing that 46 VIII, 17| into hiding, and if their skin is soft they slough off 47 VIII, 17| old-age", but not if the skin is shell-like, as is the 48 VIII, 17| and they slough off the skin in springtime when emerging 49 VIII, 17| Vipers also slough off their skin both in spring and in autumn, 50 VIII, 17| serpent begins to slough, the skin peels off at first from 51 VIII, 17| During the sloughing of the skin an inner layer comes to 52 VIII, 21| bristles off the chine the skin will appear suffused with 53 IX, 5 | first grow in a kind of skin envelope, and get rough 54 IX, 33 | them, but hides them in the skin of a hare or fox and leaves 55 IX, 45 | not long in the body; its skin, stretched tight on a frame, 56 IX, 45 | hooves, like the bull. Its skin is impervious to blows.


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