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Alphabetical    [«  »]
table 7
tadpoles 1
tags 1
tail 47
tail-feathers 3
tail-fins 1
tail-parts 1
Frequency    [«  »]
47 red
47 short
47 spring
47 tail
47 termed
46 air
46 bear
Aristotle
The History of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

tail

   Book,  Paragraph
1 I, 5 | and they swim most rapidly tail foremost, by the aid of 2 I, 5 | by means of its feet and tail; and its tail resembles 3 I, 5 | its feet and tail; and its tail resembles that of the sheatfish, 4 I, 5 | have their stings in the tail, dipterous, such as are 5 II, 1 | shape they resemble a fish’s tail.~The movements of animals, 6 II, 1 | Most quadrupeds have a tail; for even the seal has a 7 II, 1 | as a general rule, the tail corresponds with the body 8 II, 1 | four teats like the cow, a tail like that of an ass, and 9 II, 1 | animals devoid of feet, the tail, and the like.~When animals 10 II, 1 | colour vermilion; that its tail is like that of the land-scorpion; 11 II, 1 | that it has a sting in the tail, and has the faculty of 12 II, 1 | that are attached to the tail; that the sound of its voice 13 II, 7 | just visible; it has the tail of a pig, the neigh of a 14 II, 8 | is a quadruped, nor yet a tail, inasmuch as it is a biped, 15 II, 8 | by the way that it has a tail as small as small can be, 16 II, 8 | sort of indication of a tail. The genitals of the female 17 II, 9 | observed, is furnished with a tail. In all such creatures the 18 II, 10 | viviparous quadrupeds, and with a tail, usually large, in exceptional 19 II, 11 | that of the baboon. Its tail is exceedingly long, terminates 20 II, 11 | alike, for the eyes and the tail come alike under its influence. 21 II, 11 | near to the root of the tail. It has blood only round 22 II, 12 | with quills. They have no tail, but a rump with tail-feathers, 23 II, 13 | viscera; and behind it has a tail of continuous, undivided 24 II, 15 | appear to have gall in their tail, but what is so called does 25 IV, 2 | inwards. The crawfish has a tail, and five fins on it; and 26 IV, 2 | round-backed carid has a tail and four fins; the squilla 27 IV, 2 | squilla also has fins at the tail on either side. In the case 28 IV, 2 | squilla the middle art of the tail is spinous: only that in 29 IV, 2 | in a straight line to the tail, and terminates where the 30 IV, 7 | in the direction of the tail, as is observed in the scolopendra.~ 31 IV, 7 | insect furnished with a long tail. And, further, the scorpion 32 IV, 10 | for a slight motion of the tail. And it is quite obvious 33 v, 5 | way, but also, where the tail from its thinness is no 34 v, 5 | other like fishes where the tail is large, copulate only 35 v, 7 | one animal turns up its tail and the other puts his tail 36 v, 7 | tail and the other puts his tail on the other’s tail. Copulation 37 v, 7 | his tail on the other’s tail. Copulation takes place 38 v, 17 | curving the flap of its tail, and then, squeezing the 39 v, 31 | wood-lice, only that their tail is flat. Sea-lice are uniform 40 VI, 32 | organ lies underneath the tail, and does to some extent 41 VI, 32 | male, has it underneath her tail, unprovided with duct or 42 VIII, 3 | finch; the second has a long tail, and from its habitat is 43 VIII, 17| head and ending with the tail. During the sloughing of 44 VIII, 30| talents, with the span of its tail two cubits and a palm broad.~ 45 IX, 2 | often found alive with its tail lopped off, and the conger 46 IX, 44 | they run away with their tail between their legs, like 47 IX, 45 | is cloven-footed, and the tail, which resembles that of


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