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Alphabetical [« »] eat 16 eatable 1 eaten 1 eating 16 eats 15 echeneis 1 echinometrae 1 | Frequency [« »] 16 consists 16 differences 16 eat 16 eating 16 flight 16 free 16 gives | Aristotle The History of Animals IntraText - Concordances eating |
Book, Paragraph
1 II, 14 | The creature is unfit for eating. Some people assert that 2 IV, 8 | enjoying the taste and the eating of food of this kind. Fishes 3 v, 30 | the males are the sweeter eating; but, after copulation, 4 VIII, 5 | dogs bring on a vomit by eating grass and thereby purge 5 VIII, 13| to the shore are better eating than deep-sea fish. The 6 VIII, 17| first emerging takes to eating arum with the view of opening 7 VIII, 21| sets in the animal gives up eating. The swineherds know but 8 VIII, 30| Old fishes also are bad eating; the old tunny is unfit 9 VIII, 30| the male fish is better eating than the female; but the 10 IX, 1 | nostril, and prevents his eating.~Of herons there are three 11 IX, 5 | seseli shrub, and after eating of it returns to its young. 12 IX, 6 | winter-den, they at once take to eating cuckoo-pint, as has been 13 IX, 6 | vomiting. The panther, after eating panther’s-bane, tries to 14 IX, 37 | in its nest, and, after eating up all that is eatable, 15 IX, 44 | wildness. The lion, while he is eating, is most ferocious; but 16 IX, 50 | they do from the process of eating. It is the animals that