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Alphabetical [« »] coincidence 2 coition 6 colander 1 cold 37 colder 1 coldest 1 coldness 3 | Frequency [« »] 38 swim 38 would 37 always 37 cold 37 connected 37 fleshy 37 length | Aristotle The History of Animals IntraText - Concordances cold |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 11 | hardness, or warmth and cold, in any part of it, just 2 I, 16 | of veins, and naturally cold to the touch; in the great 3 III, 10 | warm places and soft in cold ones. Again, straight hair 4 III, 17 | if subjected to extreme cold, whereas fat can melt but 5 III, 20 | coagulate under the influence of cold, but rather runs to whey; 6 IV, 7 | excepting such as are naturally cold by nature, or such as from 7 v, 30 | the cicada is not found in cold places, and consequently 8 VI, 2 | congeals under the influence of cold, whereas the white instead 9 VI, 3 | them there is a white and cold liquid inside, quite glittering 10 VI, 15 | we have the fact that in cold weather they are not caught, 11 VI, 17 | consequently, as the mud continues cold for a long while, spawns 12 VII, 3 | day, if it be placed in cold water it holds together 13 VIII, 2 | into water particularly cold. They will also die of suffocation 14 VIII, 12| are modified so as to suit cold and heat and the variations 15 VIII, 12| quitting Pontus and the cold countries after the autumnal 16 VIII, 12| temperature, either hot or cold; thus the mackerel migrates 17 VIII, 12| fatter in migrating from cold to heat than in migrating 18 VIII, 12| in migrating from heat to cold; thus the quail is fatter 19 VIII, 12| spring. The migration from cold countries is contemporaneous 20 VIII, 13| to avoid the extremes of cold and heat.~Fish living near 21 VIII, 13| well as against extreme cold. Sometimes an entire genus 22 VIII, 13| weather is either extremely cold or extremely hot.~ 23 VIII, 15| the weather is extremely cold. Some fishes, however, hide 24 VIII, 17| whether it be by reason of the cold or from some other cause. 25 VIII, 19| Fishes do not thrive in cold places, and those fishes 26 VIII, 19| they get frozen with the cold, and are thrown up on shore.~ 27 VIII, 19| disease is due to extreme cold even more than to an excessive 28 VIII, 19| sea in seasons of severe cold. The gilthead also suffers 29 VIII, 20| fresh water is tolerably cold. A trench accordingly is 30 VIII, 20| freeze to death in extremely cold weather. So much for animals 31 VIII, 24| if the water be impure or cold, or mixed up with alien 32 VIII, 25| capable of enduring extreme cold, which circumstance will 33 IX, 3 | goat is more impatient of cold than the sheep.~Shepherds 34 IX, 7 | Turtle-doves in summer live in cold places, (and in warm places 35 IX, 7 | habitations in summer and cold ones in winter.~ 36 IX, 37 | they swim out owing to the cold, for the narrow waters are 37 IX, 49B| clear at one time of extreme cold, and at another time of