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Alphabetical    [«  »]
winged 15
wingless 4
winglets 2
wings 52
wings-an 1
wink 2
winnowed 1
Frequency    [«  »]
52 round
52 supplied
52 weather
52 wings
51 becomes
51 change
51 dog
Aristotle
The History of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

wings

   Book,  Paragraph
1 I, 1 | some are furnished with wings, as the diver and the grebe; 2 I, 1 | some are furnished with wings, such as birds and bees, 3 I, 1 | the animals with leathern wings can walk; the bat has feet 4 I, 1 | be furnished with feet or wings or be fitted for a life 5 I, 4 | locomotion in the feet, the wings, or in organs to correspond.~ 6 I, 5 | furnished with feathered wings, as the eagle and the hawk; 7 I, 5 | furnished with membranous wings, as the bee and the cockchafer; 8 I, 5 | furnished with leathern wings, as the flying fox and the 9 I, 5 | of blood have feathered wings or leathern wings; the bloodless 10 I, 5 | feathered wings or leathern wings; the bloodless creatures 11 I, 5 | creatures have membranous wings, as insects. The creatures 12 I, 5 | creatures that have feathered wings or leathern wings have either 13 I, 5 | feathered wings or leathern wings have either two feet or 14 I, 5 | Creatures that have feathered wings are classed as a genus under 15 I, 5 | sheath-winged, for they have their wings in a sheath or shard, like 16 I, 5 | two feet, birds with two wings and two feet, quadrupeds 17 I, 5 | whether furnished with wings or feet, move with more 18 I, 5 | with four feet and four wings: and, I may observe in passing, 19 I, 5 | though a quadruped it has wings also.~All animals move alike, 20 I, 6 | of the insects some have wings as well as feet.~Of the 21 I, 6 | qudapedal and unprovided with wings are blooded without exception, 22 II, 1 | arms or front legs have wings which bend frontwards.~The 23 III, 3 | forelegs, in birds to the wings, and in fishes to the upper 24 III, 12| excepting the crane. The wings of this bird are ash-coloured 25 III, 12| but as it grows old the wings get black. Again, owing 26 III, 12| creature that has undivided wings. Neither will the sting 27 IV, 7 | of those that have their wings in a sheath or shard, like 28 IV, 7 | insects are furnished with wings. Some insects are dipterous 29 IV, 7 | tetrapterous or furnished with four wings, as the bee; and, by the 30 IV, 7 | no insect with only two wings has a sting in the rear. 31 IV, 7 | sheath or shard for their wings, as the cockchafer; whereas 32 IV, 7 | cockchafer; whereas in others the wings are unsheathed, as in the 33 IV, 9 | opening and shutting their wings in the act of flying; for 34 IV, 9 | friction of air between the wings when in motion. The noise 35 IV, 9 | the sound made by their wings is obviously not voice, 36 v, 19| bottle fly, furnished with wings, which can hop or crawl 37 v, 20| from the shrinking of their wings. The myops dies from dropsy 38 v, 22| of the bee gets feet and wings as soon as the cell has 39 v, 22| before the coming of the wings, the bees will eat them 40 v, 22| and if you nip off the wings from a drone and let it 41 v, 22| spontaneously bite off the wings from off all the remaining 42 VI, 6 | animals. That is to say, its wings blanch, and for some days 43 IX, 8 | their brood under their wings. Not to be discovered, as 44 IX, 13| halcyon; the tips of the wings are About autumn-time it 45 IX, 14| purple; the whole body and wings, and especially parts about 46 IX, 32| with white head, very short wings, long tail-feathers, in 47 IX, 32| large thick neck, curved wings, and broad tailfeathers; 48 IX, 32| will strike him with its wings and scratch him with its 49 IX, 34| of water-drops with their wings.~ 50 IX, 40| engendered, which take on wings and fly away. When the combs 51 IX, 40| than the big ones; their wings are battered; their colour 52 IX, 41| with the vibration of his wings, wasps that have no stings


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