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Alphabetical [« »] bolder 1 boldest 2 bolitaina 1 bone 43 bones 42 bonito 5 bonitos 1 | Frequency [« »] 44 makes 44 provided 44 run 43 bone 43 dolphin 43 genus 43 give | Aristotle The History of Animals IntraText - Concordances bone |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | or eye, flesh flesh, and bone bone; and in like manner 2 I, 1 | eye, flesh flesh, and bone bone; and in like manner with 3 I, 1 | analogy, as, for instance, bone is only analogous to fish-bone, 4 I, 1 | sinew, skin, vein, hair, bone, gristle, nail, horn (a 5 I, 7 | consists entirely of thin bone, rounded in shape, and contained 6 I, 11| trumpet-shell, and the innermost bone is like the ear itself, 7 I, 11| gums are teeth, composed of bone.~Inside the mouth is another 8 I, 16| the stronger one near the bone of the skull; the inner 9 I, 16| the thinnest and weakest bone of the head, which is termed 10 II, 1 | neck composed of one single bone instead of vertebrae; but, 11 II, 1 | legs. They have also the bone placed straight up in the 12 II, 1 | organ in the weasel has a bone.~When man has arrived at 13 II, 15| though not in all cases, a bone is found inside the heart. 14 II, 15| horse’s heart also has a bone inside it.~The genera referred 15 III, 2 | analogous to flesh; then bone, and parts that are analogous 16 III, 2 | parts that are analogous to bone, as fish-bone and gristle; 17 III, 4 | branches fasten on to the bone. Vessels also extend to 18 III, 7 | connected with one single bone, and are interconnected, 19 III, 7 | there is no instance of a bone standing apart by itself. 20 III, 7 | of one single undivided bone, as in the case of the dog; 21 III, 7 | the jaws, constituted of bone. (Animals in general move 22 III, 7 | teeth are constituted of bone, and are half-way perforated; 23 III, 7 | half-way perforated; and the bone in question is the only 24 III, 7 | question is the only kind of bone which it is found impossible 25 III, 7 | do not; for no animal has bone in the region of the stomach. 26 III, 7 | that is, composed either of bone or of spine.~The other portions 27 III, 8 | is of the same nature as bone, but differs from it in 28 III, 8 | relative defect. And just like bone, cartilage also, if cut, 29 III, 8 | gristle-like substance analogous to bone, and in this gristle-like 30 III, 9 | flexible and fissile; but bone is neither flexible nor 31 III, 9 | point of attachment to the bone which juts out from the 32 III, 9 | to the skin than to the bone; which will account for 33 III, 11| solidity in no way from bone.~Of all animals man has 34 III, 13| together again, and the bone thus stripped of its membrane 35 III, 16| between the skin and the bone, or the substance analogous 36 III, 16| the substance analogous to bone; for just as spine is a 37 III, 16| spine is a counterpart of bone, so is the flesh-like substance 38 IV, 1 | something intermediate between bone and flesh; that is to say, 39 IV, 1 | substance intermediate between bone and fishbone, with (in part) 40 IV, 7 | they have nor spine, nor bone, nor sepia-bone, nor enveloping 41 VII, 10| contrasting difference between one bone and another, but all are 42 VIII, 5| let go until it hears a bone crack. The hair of the beaver 43 IX, 6 | has been said, consists of bone: the organ of the male is