Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] hills 3 him 66 himself 9 hind 24 hind-feet 1 hind-legs 9 hind-limbs 1 | Frequency [« »] 24 former 24 hide 24 high 24 hind 24 later 24 mares 24 minute | Aristotle The History of Animals IntraText - Concordances hind |
Book, Paragraph
1 II, 1 | has short ankles to its hind feet. But it has a nose 2 II, 1 | flexions of their fore and hind limbs in directions opposite 3 II, 1 | legs bend forwards and the hind ones backwards, and the 4 II, 1 | sleep. And it bends its hind legs just as a man bends 5 II, 1 | pairs of legs, fore and hind, bend forwards, with a slight 6 II, 1 | inconsiderable size. The hind feet are also furnished 7 II, 1 | animals that have feet the hind legs are to be rated as 8 II, 10| parts, the front legs and hind legs, and the part analogous 9 II, 11| outside into two, on the hind feet the inside part into 10 II, 12| as quadrupeds bend their hind legs, as was noticed previously. 11 IV, 11| not; as, for instance, the hind has no horns, and where 12 v, 2 | large-sized vivipara, the hind only very rarely sustains 13 v, 2 | the case of the stag and hind, domesticated, of course. 14 v, 14| deeper-toned bay than the hind. Moreover, the male cries 15 VI, 29| 29~The hind, as has been stated, submits 16 VI, 29| constant to one particular hind, but after a while quits 17 VI, 29| impregnated by a single male. The hind, as a rule, bears but one 18 VI, 29| at no other time with the hind; it takes place only after 19 VI, 29| substance is phlegm-like.~The hind leads the fawn to her lair; 20 VI, 29| womb of the mother.~The hind has four teats like the 21 VIII, 5| it can walk erect on its hind legs. All the flesh it eats 22 IX, 5 | Among wild quadrupeds the hind appears to be pre-eminently 23 IX, 5 | impossible to secure it, for the hind catches it before it falls 24 IX, 50| after being hung up by the hind legs, it is operated on;