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Alphabetical [« »] earliest 7 early 23 earnest 1 ears 32 earth 5 earth-holes 1 earth-mould 1 | Frequency [« »] 32 birth 32 born 32 carnivorous 32 ears 32 extends 32 gills 32 here | Aristotle The History of Animals IntraText - Concordances ears |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 11 | goats inspire through their ears. Of the ear one part is 2 I, 11 | Of animals possessed of ears man is the only one that 3 I, 11 | possessed of hearing, some have ears, whilst others have none, 4 I, 11 | merely have the passages for ears visible, as, for example, 5 I, 11 | cetaceans, are all provided with ears; for, by the way, the shark-kind 6 I, 11 | dolphin can hear, but has no ears, nor yet any passages visible. 7 I, 11 | alone is unable to move his ears, and all other animals can 8 I, 11 | animals can move them. And the ears lie, with man, in the same 9 I, 11 | with some quadrupeds. Of ears, some are fine, some are 10 I, 11 | indicate character. Some ears are large, some small, some 11 II, 1 | resembles man in its face and ears; that its eyes are blue, 12 II, 8 | has similar nostrils and ears, and teeth like those of 13 II, 10 | quadrupeds are unprovided with ears, but possess only the passage 14 II, 12 | beak. Neither have they ears nor a nose, but only passages 15 II, 13 | their passages, neither ears nor nostrils; but all fishes 16 III, 2 | near to each of the two ears. There is another pair of 17 III, 3 | runs from the head, past ears, through the neck; which 18 III, 3 | on until they reach the ears at the junction of the lower 19 III, 7 | are in the region of the ears, small in comparison with 20 III, 8 | found in the region of the ears, in the nostrils, and around 21 III, 9 | horns as freely as their ears.~Of animals furnished with 22 IV, 8 | to say, some animals have ears, while others have the passage 23 v, 14 | in rutting time; if the ears do not thus drop, it may 24 VII, 4 | imperforate, for instance the ears or the nostrils. But as 25 VII, 8 | upon the knees, and the ears free at the sides.~All animals 26 VIII, 12| it has feathers about its ears; by some it is called the 27 VIII, 23| disease are drooping of the ears and disinclination for food. 28 VIII, 24| are a throwing back of the ears followed by a projection 29 VIII, 28| breadth; the goats have ears a span and a palm long, 30 VIII, 28| palm long, and some have ears that flap down to the ground; 31 IX, 5 | confederate. If the animal has its ears cocked, it can hear well 32 IX, 5 | cannot escape its ken; if its ears are down, you can.~