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Alphabetical [« »] saltish 1 salve 1 same 247 sand 18 sandals 1 sandarace 2 sandpiper 1 | Frequency [« »] 18 relative 18 rising 18 rocks 18 sand 18 sharp 18 sinews 18 skull | Aristotle The History of Animals IntraText - Concordances sand |
Book, Paragraph
1 IV, 1 | the animal get on to the sand it can no longer retain 2 IV, 8 | appears to burrow in the sand, and to hide himself deeper 3 IV, 10 | to the ground, or to the sand or to a stone at the bottom, 4 IV, 10 | fish go to sleep in the sand; and they can be distinguished 5 IV, 10 | outlines of their shapes in the sand, and are caught in this 6 v, 11 | spontaneously from mud and sand.~As a general rule, then, 7 v, 15 | burrow for a time in the sand, like the murex.)~(Shell-fish, 8 VI, 15 | that proceed from mud and sand, even of those kinds that 9 VI, 15 | spontaneously out of mud and sand.~From the facts above enumerated 10 VI, 15 | sources, from mud, or from sand and from decayed matter 11 VI, 17 | rubbing its belly against the sand.~Tunny fish also burst asunder 12 VIII, 2 | mullet-kind lives on sea-weed and sand. The cephalus, called by 13 VIII, 15| burrow for sleep in the sand and some in mud, just keeping 14 VIII, 19| burrow for warmth in the sand in shallow waters near to 15 IX, 37 | stirs up a place full of sand and mud and conceals itself 16 IX, 37 | them; it also hides in the sand and mud, and catches all 17 IX, 37 | angelfish burrow in the sand, and after concealing themselves 18 IX, 37 | and burrow rapidly in the sand; its snout, by the way,