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Alphabetical [« »] most 170 mostly 6 moth 1 mother 38 mother-bird 6 mother-cuckoo 1 mother-nightingale 1 | Frequency [« »] 38 had 38 largest 38 lung 38 mother 38 next 38 ordinary 38 respect | Aristotle The History of Animals IntraText - Concordances mother |
Book, Paragraph
1 II, 1 | males that take after the mother, which phenomenon is observable 2 v, 8 | when the deep~Cradles the mother Halcyon and her brood.~And 3 v, 27 | very often envelop the mother phalangium and eject and 4 v, 27 | of co-operating with the mother in the hatching. The brood 5 v, 28 | engendered in the region of the mother grasshopper’s neck; and 6 v, 34 | the inside of the egg. The mother viper brings forth all its 7 VI, 2 | When they are put under the mother bird, the liquid contents 8 VI, 4 | within twenty days; and the mother bird pecks a hole in the 9 VI, 6 | the young ones grow, the mother becomes wearied with feeding 10 VI, 6 | operation; at all events mother birds that lay several eggs 11 VI, 18 | womb. After littering the mother offers the foremost teat 12 VI, 20 | bulk on the part of the mother is not so great as might 13 VI, 23 | more apt to resemble the mother than the sire. If such hybrid 14 VI, 26 | camel is removed from the mother when a year old. The animal 15 VI, 27 | immediately after birth, sucks the mother, not with its trunk but 16 VI, 29 | while yet in the womb of the mother.~The hind has four teats 17 VI, 30 | proportion to the size of the mother; that is to say, it is larger 18 VII, 1 | growth, first within his mother’s womb and afterward to 19 VII, 4 | prone to movement within its mother’s womb than a female child, 20 VII, 4 | does happen to survive the mother is apt to think that it 21 VII, 4 | in the eighth month the mother also succumbs as a general 22 VII, 4 | escaped the notice of the mother. What I mean to say is that 23 VII, 4 | short interval, then the mother bears that which was later 24 VII, 4 | replete with food of which the mother had partaken.~ 25 VII, 6 | tendency to take after the mother, and the boys after the 26 VII, 6 | the boys taking after the mother and the girls after the 27 VIII, 24| state, delivered by the mother before the foal appears.~ 28 IX, 4 | all the solicitude of a mother, but, as it will be unprovided 29 IX, 4 | will be unprovided with mother’s milk, its solicitude will 30 IX, 5 | returns to its young. The mother takes its young betimes 31 IX, 29 | and, as they say, this mother bird, when the young cuckoo 32 IX, 29 | the brood of the rearing mother; others say that the young 33 IX, 29 | progeny; the fact is, the mother cuckoo is quite conscious 34 IX, 41 | the leader, the so-called mother, engenders no longer working-wasps 35 IX, 47 | declines intercourse with its mother; if his keeper tries compulsion, 36 IX, 47 | keeper covered over the mother and put the young male to 37 IX, 47 | the young males with the mother, he had him brought to the 38 IX, 47 | declined; that, after the mother’s head had been concealed