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Alphabetical [« »] shores 1 shoreweed 1 shorn 1 short 47 short-fleeced 1 short-lived 5 short-necked 1 | Frequency [« »] 47 mullet 47 prey 47 red 47 short 47 spring 47 tail 47 termed | Aristotle The History of Animals IntraText - Concordances short |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | magnitude or parvitude, in short in the way of excess or 2 I, 1 | have a long bill, others a short one; some have abundance 3 I, 15 | and where the upper arm is short the thigh is usually short 4 I, 15 | short the thigh is usually short also, and where the feet 5 I, 16 | the buttocks is thick and short. The caul, or great omentum, 6 II, 1 | it is five-toed, and has short ankles to its hind feet. 7 II, 1 | whereas man has only a few short hairs excepting on the head, 8 II, 8 | upper-arm and thigh are short in proportion to the forearm 9 II, 11 | of these parts is for a short distance divided after a 10 II, 12 | rump with tail-feathers, short in such as are long-legged 11 II, 17 | and simple; the spleen is short and round: as is the case 12 III, 1 | serpent whatever: nor, in short, any animal devoid of feet, 13 III, 4 | communications. From it one vein, short and wide, extends through 14 III, 4 | side of it there extends a short but thick vein to the spleen 15 III, 6 | or only comes a little short of, the blood of sheep. 16 IV, 1 | body is large and the feet short; so short, in fact, that 17 IV, 1 | large and the feet short; so short, in fact, that they cannot 18 IV, 2 | come the eyes, small and short, not large like the eyes 19 IV, 2 | a spine turned outwards, short and straight. The body in 20 IV, 2 | After the mouth comes a short oesophagus, and then a membranous 21 IV, 3 | comes the oesophagus, very short, so short in fact that the 22 IV, 3 | oesophagus, very short, so short in fact that the stomach 23 IV, 10 | although their sleep is of very short duration. The proof of their 24 IV, 11 | biped or quadruped; in short, in all such as by copulation 25 v, 5 | a time which is neither short nor very long.~Again, in 26 v, 14 | the cry of the female is short, and that of the male prolonged. 27 VI, 7 | cuckoo appears only for a short time in summer, and in winter 28 VI, 15 | its place, and so, with short intervals excepted, it may 29 VI, 15 | watery and keeps only a short time, as has been stated, 30 VI, 18 | years, but some fall little short of the twenty.~ 31 VII, 3 | infant be a male. And in short, these and all suchlike 32 VII, 3 | further differentiation. In short, while within the womb, 33 VII, 4 | conception take place at a short interval, then the mother 34 VII, 9 | who are weak-chested and short of breath. Labour is apt 35 VIII, 2 | they be long confined in a short supply of water, with the 36 VIII, 5 | down to the ground. For a short time together it can walk 37 VIII, 17| moisture behind, and after a short interval flies up into the 38 VIII, 23| the breath comes warm at short intervals; in fact, craurus 39 IX, 1 | means of subsistence run short, creatures of like kind 40 IX, 5 | this excrescence being short and thick. In their second 41 IX, 7 | chaff together; if it runs short of mud, it souses its body 42 IX, 21 | and slender; its legs are short, like those of the woodpecker.~ 43 IX, 32 | large, with white head, very short wings, long tail-feathers, 44 IX, 37 | fishing-line, and bites it off short; it is caught in some districts 45 IX, 40 | threatening and the hive runs short of provisions; under such 46 IX, 40 | composed. When honey runs short they expel the drones, and 47 IX, 49B| not clearly heard for a short time previous to its departure.