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Alphabetical    [«  »]
sedentary 1
sedge-bird 1
sediment 1
see 31
seed 13
seeds 1
seeing 4
Frequency    [«  »]
31 mentioned
31 pig
31 previously
31 see
31 something
30 bears
30 crab
Aristotle
The History of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

see

   Book,  Paragraph
1 I, 9 | absolute fact it cannot see, and has no eyes visible 2 I, 16 | as we may both feel and see.~The back of the head is 3 II, 10 | composed of scaly plates. They see but poorly under water, 4 II, 11 | object that it wants to see. The change in its colour 5 III, 3 | upper or pectoral fins. (See diagram.) The trunks of 6 III, 3 | at the hand and fingers. (See diagram.)~Each vein of the 7 IV, 1 | fins round about the sac. (See diagram.) In all molluscs 8 IV, 1 | side from the suckers. (See diagram.)~In front of the 9 IV, 1 | mode of swimming it can see in front, for its eyes are 10 IV, 1 | thicker than the oesophagus. (See diagram.)~Molluscs have 11 IV, 1 | attaches, resembling a breast; (see diagram) in the female there 12 IV, 1 | organs, situated higher up; (see diagram) with both sexes 13 IV, 2 | resemble the crawfish. (See diagram.)It is very different 14 IV, 2 | most part devoid of feet. (See diagram.) Of all these animals 15 IV, 2 | developed in a higher degree. (See diagram.)~The lobster is 16 IV, 6 | very minute and hard to see, whereby it admits and discharges 17 IV, 8 | Further, when fishermen see a shoal of fish feeding 18 IV, 8 | again as though they could see what you were doing. Furthermore, 19 IV, 10 | all hard-eyed creatures see but indistinctly), but even 20 v, 18 | body of the little sepia. (See diagram.)~The female sepia 21 v, 18 | few exceptions, they never see the year out; and the same 22 VI, 5 | get well again and will see by and by.)~ 23 VI, 7 | a few days that you will see hawks about when the cuckoo’ 24 VI, 27 | and can walk about and see distinctly the moment it 25 VII, 3 | all the limbs are plain to see, including the penis, and 26 VIII, 19| light grows stronger they see comparatively well.~We know 27 IX, 1 | young or full grown.~Thus we see that in the case of the 28 IX, 7 | claws; as far as one can see, the birds suffer no other 29 IX, 10 | extensive view; if they see clouds and signs of bad 30 IX, 34 | night-raven and all the birds see poorly in the daytime seek 31 IX, 40 | fly away home, and one may see plainly that their load


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