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Alphabetical [« »] childbirth 1 childhood 2 childless 2 children 46 chill 1 chin 4 chine 4 | Frequency [« »] 46 air 46 bear 46 breasts 46 children 46 five 46 hand 46 liquid | Aristotle The History of Animals IntraText - Concordances children |
Book, Paragraph
1 III, 21| is the more wholesome for children.~ 2 IV, 9 | but they cannot speak. Children, just as they have no control 3 IV, 9 | so that in the interval children for the most part lisp and 4 IV, 10| most given to dreaming. Children and infants do not dream, 5 VII, 1 | who become mothers of many children; for it appears to be the 6 VII, 1 | has given birth to three children. Women of a lascivious disposition 7 VII, 1 | they have borne several children.~After the age of twenty-one 8 VII, 1 | and likely to produce male children, but when thin and unclotted 9 VII, 3 | groin.~In the case of male children the first movement usually 10 VII, 3 | of those that bear many children, as indeed I have already 11 VII, 4 | labour in the case of female children is apt to be protracted 12 VII, 4 | while in the case of male children it is acute and by a long 13 VII, 4 | into the eleventh month.~Children that come into the world 14 VII, 4 | survive. The seven-months’ children are the earliest that are 15 VII, 4 | bear and bring forth many children without difficulty, and 16 VII, 4 | difficulty, and where the children when born are capable of 17 VII, 4 | places the eight-months’ children live and are brought up, 18 VII, 4 | only do the eight-months’ children not live, but when they 19 VII, 4 | own lives. In like manner children that are apparently born 20 VII, 4 | forth three and even four children, and especially in certain 21 VII, 4 | certain women who had twenty children at four births; each time 22 VII, 4 | and brings forth the two children like actual twins, as happened, 23 VII, 5 | salt in overabundance their children are apt to be born destitute 24 VII, 5 | have been known to bear children. But beyond that age there 25 VII, 6 | actually known to procreate children at seventy years of age. 26 VII, 6 | they are unable to produce children to one another, while they 27 VII, 6 | one another produce male children or female, as the case may 28 VII, 6 | as the case may be, but children of the opposite sex when 29 VII, 6 | are young produce female children and in later life male children; 30 VII, 6 | children and in later life male children; and in other cases the 31 VII, 6 | are childless, but have children when they grow older; and 32 VII, 6 | grow older; and some have children to begin with, and later 33 VII, 6 | all his two and seventy children is said to have begotten 34 VII, 6 | rule apt to bear female children rather than male.~It is 35 VII, 6 | deformed parents come deformed children, lame from lame and blind 36 VII, 6 | and, speaking generally, children often inherit anything that 37 VII, 6 | however, are few; for the children of cripples are mostly sound, 38 VII, 6 | rule regarding them. While children mostly resemble their parents 39 VII, 6 | have a tendency to produce children that take after themselves, 40 VII, 6 | after themselves, and others children that take after the husband; 41 VII, 10| world head foremost, and children, moreover, have their hands 42 VII, 10| properly formed; but in children the front part of the head 43 VII, 10| are born with teeth, but children begin to cut their teeth 44 VII, 10| much the quicker are the children’s teeth to come.~ 45 VII, 12| 12~Children are very commonly subject 46 VIII, 1| phenomena of childhood: for in children may be observed the traces