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Alphabetical [« »] sought 2 sound 39 soundly 3 sounds 17 soups 2 source 2 sources 1 | Frequency [« »] 17 seal 17 seldom 17 solid 17 sounds 17 sponges 17 stag 17 suet | Aristotle The History of Animals IntraText - Concordances sounds |
Book, Paragraph
1 II, 12| faculty of uttering articulate sounds; and this faculty is chiefly 2 IV, 9 | the articulation of vocal sounds by the instrumentality of 3 IV, 9 | can emit vocal or vowel sounds; non-vocal or consonantal 4 IV, 9 | non-vocal or consonantal sounds are made by the tongue and 5 IV, 9 | these vocal and non-vocal sounds language is composed. Consequently, 6 IV, 9 | enabled to make noises or sounds by other organs than the 7 IV, 9 | emit certain inarticulate sounds and squeaks, which is what 8 IV, 9 | moving which they produce the sounds. Some cartilaginous fish 9 IV, 9 | therefore utter vocal or vowel sounds), for it is furnished with 10 IV, 9 | Birds can utter vocal sounds; and such of them can articulate 11 IV, 9 | Viviparous quadrupeds utter vocal sounds of different kinds, but 12 IV, 9 | capability of uttering vocal sounds, the converse does not hold 13 IV, 9 | is, they can make vocal sounds, but they cannot speak. 14 IV, 9 | lisp and stutter.~Vocal sounds and modes of language differ 15 IV, 9 | according to locality. Vocal sounds are characterized chiefly 16 IV, 9 | the same voice or vocal sounds, but they differ from one 17 VI, 7 | about when the cuckoo’s note sounds early in the season. The