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Alphabetical [« »] much 103 mucous 5 mucus 3 mud 40 muddy 2 mulberries 1 mule 18 | Frequency [« »] 40 growth 40 longer 40 manner 40 mud 40 put 40 usually 39 molluscs | Aristotle The History of Animals IntraText - Concordances mud |
Book, Paragraph
1 v, 11 | grow spontaneously from mud and sand.~As a general rule, 2 v, 15 | other testaceans grow out of mud and decaying matter. The 3 v, 15 | wherever you have slimy mud there you are sure to find 4 v, 15 | spontaneous generation in mud, differing from one another 5 v, 19 | others grow in decaying mud or dung; others in timber, 6 v, 20 | hole they smear over with mud and lay their grubs inside 7 v, 20 | small holes or cells of mud on a wall or on a grave-stone, 8 VI, 15 | some fish that proceed from mud and sand, even of those 9 VI, 15 | of the Dogstar, and the mud had all dried up; at the 10 VI, 15 | grows spontaneously out of mud and sand.~From the facts 11 VI, 15 | one of two sources, from mud, or from sand and from decayed 12 VI, 16 | been drained off and the mud has been dredged away, the 13 VI, 16 | that grow spontaneously in mud and in humid ground; in 14 VI, 17 | The red mullet spawns on mud, and consequently, as the 15 VI, 17 | and consequently, as the mud continues cold for a long 16 VI, 18 | repeatedly all over with mud and then drying themselves 17 VIII, 2 | sea-weed, on shell-fish, and on mud. The grey mullet feeds on 18 VIII, 2 | The grey mullet feeds on mud, the dascyllus on mud and 19 VIII, 2 | on mud, the dascyllus on mud and offal, the scarus or 20 VIII, 2 | condition. The cephalus lives in mud, and is in consequence heavy 21 VIII, 2 | other fish. As it lives in mud, it has every now and then 22 VIII, 2 | leap upwards out of the mud so as to wash the slime 23 VIII, 2 | frightened, it hides its head in mud, under the notion that it 24 VIII, 2 | fishes feed habitually on mud or sea-weed or sea-moss 25 VIII, 2 | red mullet burrows in the mud, when it sets the mud in 26 VIII, 2 | the mud, when it sets the mud in motion and quits its 27 VIII, 2 | few here and there feed on mud and on chance morsels of 28 VIII, 2 | water is troubled and the mud raised up by contrary winds; 29 VIII, 2 | chance food found in the mud. Their usual feeding-time 30 VIII, 6 | being allowed to wallow in mud. They like to feed in batches 31 VIII, 15| primas-tunny conceals itself in the mud; this may be inferred from 32 VIII, 15| period, it is covered with mud and has its fins damaged. 33 VIII, 15| in the sand and some in mud, just keeping their mouths 34 VIII, 15| in the Bosporus; for the mud is there brought up to the 35 IX, 6 | beplaster themselves with mud, by first soaking in the 36 IX, 7 | as men do, the bird mixes mud and chaff together; if it 37 IX, 7 | together; if it runs short of mud, it souses its body in water 38 IX, 30 | young in long cells made of mud, and furnished with a hole 39 IX, 37 | a place full of sand and mud and conceals itself therein, 40 IX, 37 | also hides in the sand and mud, and catches all the creatures