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Alphabetical [« »] have 717 having 36 havoc 1 hawk 21 hawks 13 he 141 he-goat 5 | Frequency [« »] 21 genera 21 generally 21 gestation 21 hawk 21 instances 21 internally 21 interval | Aristotle The History of Animals IntraText - Concordances hawk |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 5 | wings, as the eagle and the hawk; some are furnished with 2 VI, 6 | case of the kite and the hawk. The kite in general lays 3 VI, 7 | is said by some to be a hawk transformed, because at 4 VI, 7 | the cuckoo’s coming, the hawk, which it resembles, is 5 VI, 7 | in winter disappears. The hawk has crooked talons, which 6 VI, 7 | the cuckoo resemble the hawk. In point of fact, both 7 VI, 7 | alone it does resemble the hawk, only that the markings 8 VI, 7 | that the markings of the hawk are striped, and of the 9 VI, 7 | resembles the smallest of the hawk tribe, which bird disappears 10 VI, 7 | seen to be preyed on by the hawk; and this never happens 11 VIII, 28| fox, the raven, and the hawk; others are of pretty much 12 VIII, 28| instance for the wolf and the hawk; for provision is scanty 13 IX, 11 | keeps out of sight.~The hawk also builds in inaccessible 14 IX, 12 | is less than the common hawk. Swans are web-footed, and 15 IX, 12 | and about the size of the hawk called the "dove-killer"; 16 IX, 36 | pternis; the broaded-winged hawk is called the half-buzzard; 17 IX, 36 | differing from one another. One hawk, they say, will strike and 18 IX, 36 | it is in flight; another hawk attacks the pigeon when 19 IX, 36 | species: so that, when a hawk is an assailant, if it be 20 IX, 49B| crest,~Now in the white hawk’s silver plumage drest,~ 21 IX, 49B| timely changing, on the hawk’s white wing~He greets the