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Alphabetical    [«  »]
drugs 2
drummer-bird 1
drunk 2
dry 49
drying 4
duality 9
duck 4
Frequency    [«  »]
50 sexual
49 among
49 day
49 dry
49 visible
48 autumn
48 big
Aristotle
The History of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

dry

   Book,  Paragraph
1 I, 1 | soft and moist, others are dry and solid. The soft and 2 I, 1 | belly and the bladder. The dry and solid are such as sinew, 3 I, 1 | Of animals that live on dry land some take in air and 4 I, 1 | find their sustenance on dry land; as, for instance, 5 I, 1 | derives its subsistence from dry land.~Some animals at first 6 I, 1 | such creature is found on dry land. In the water are many 7 I, 2 | twofold in kind, wet and dry, and such creatures as have 8 I, 2 | with organs receptive of dry residuum; but such as have 9 I, 2 | have organs receptive of dry residuum need not possess 10 I, 2 | and the organ receptive of dry residuum "intestine or " 11 I, 5 | the sea just as snakes use dry ground-and by the way, snakes 12 I, 5 | larger than those living on dry land or in fresh water.~ 13 I, 6 | and capable of movement on dry land, but is naturally unprovided 14 I, 11 | mouth, whether liquid or dry food, and it is the only 15 I, 16 | takes in nothing else either dry or liquid, or else it causes 16 III, 15 | excretion, it passes at times dry excretion also, which turns 17 III, 17 | supplied with suet, parched and dry. But it is about the kidneys 18 III, 21 | neighbourhood of Torone cows run dry for a few days before calving, 19 III, 22 | and sometimes it comes out dry and compact. Sperm capable 20 IV, 1 | to be thrown up high and dry on the beach; under these 21 IV, 1 | detached, and dies by and by on dry land. These polypods are 22 IV, 8 | run in a shoal high and dry up on the beach, and so 23 v, 19 | others in timber, green or dry; some in the hair of animals; 24 v, 19 | from grubs that live in dry wood: at first the grub 25 v, 22 | But when the weather is dry they attend to the honey, 26 v, 31 | for wherever there is any dry excrement, a flea is sure 27 v, 32 | practically anything, both in dry things that are becoming 28 v, 32 | web, and there are little dry twigs about it, that look 29 VI, 2 | those of birds that live on dry land; that is to say, the 30 VI, 12 | sleeps and brings forth on dry land-only close to the shore-as 31 VI, 15 | is said, at one time ran dry about the rising of the 32 VI, 18 | such of those that walk on dry land as are oviparous, to 33 VII, 3 | women when the place is dry immediately after intercourse. 34 VII, 7 | fly or swim or walk upon dry land, whether they bring 35 VII, 11 | milk stops coming and goes dry, alike in the human species 36 VIII, 2 | is to say, some live upon dry land, while others live 37 VIII, 2 | and rear their young on dry land, or near the land, 38 VIII, 2 | furnished with gills but go upon dry land and get their living 39 VIII, 2 | and fitted for walking on dry land.~In the case of all 40 VIII, 2 | it leaves the water for dry land it browses on grass). 41 VIII, 3 | as procure their food on dry land, such as frequent rivers 42 VIII, 5 | substance of it is hard and dry like the excrement of a 43 VIII, 19| summer, and autumn, and fine dry weather in winter. As a 44 VIII, 20| drought is unwholesome. During dry weather they decrease in 45 IX, 5 | in the sun, to mature and dry them. When they need no 46 IX, 7 | water and rolls about in the dry dust with wet feathers; 47 IX, 37 | mollusc that ventures on to dry land; it walks by preference 48 IX, 39 | one on the ground or on dry stone walls. It always builds 49 IX, 48 | run themselves aground on dry land; at all events, it


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