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Alphabetical [« »] parts 201 parturition 63 parvitude 1 pass 25 passage 21 passage-room 1 passage-ways 1 | Frequency [« »] 25 might 25 moreover 25 pairing 25 pass 25 penis 25 serpent 25 strong | Aristotle The History of Animals IntraText - Concordances pass |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 6 | minuteness.~After this we shall pass on to the discussion of 2 I, 17 | wall receive the breath and pass it on to the heart; and 3 II, 10 | acuteness. As a rule, they pass the day-time on land and 4 II, 14 | wit the aquatic species, pass their lives in fresh water. 5 III, 1 | midriff; afterwards they pass into the wider space and 6 III, 2 | mentioned. After this they pass on along the knee to the 7 III, 3 | and after this they both pass over the stomach and terminate 8 III, 3 | the collarbones, and then pass on, in men through the armpits 9 III, 3 | windpipe in betwixt them, they pass on until they reach the 10 III, 4 | groins-large hollow veins-and then pass on down through the legs 11 III, 6 | fluid, the lymph; and they pass from sinew to vein and from 12 v, 2 | mentioned above, and they pass the whole day long in the 13 VI, 10 | similar creatures, the eggs pass into one or other of the 14 VI, 29 | the goat. In this way they pass the time until the rain 15 VII, 3 | after birth, the females pass more quickly than the males 16 VII, 6 | traced. But parents may pass on resemblance after several 17 VII, 8 | run into the embryo, two pass through the liver where 18 VIII, 2 | near the land, but they pass their lives in water.~But 19 VIII, 2 | minute organs it comes to pass that one animal is terrestrial 20 VIII, 4 | that the swallowed mass may pass down his outstretched body; 21 VIII, 13| the Euxine in summer and pass the summer there; as do 22 VIII, 26| it is said that it will pass out if the animal takes 23 IX, 40 | the middle legs, and these pass it on to the hollow curves 24 IX, 40 | mistresses of the field they pass the time in idleness, and 25 IX, 42 | bees, store up food, but pass the winter in a torpid condition;