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belong 79
belonged 2
belonging 3
belongs 49
below 1
beneath 1
bent 7
Frequency    [«  »]
50 former
50 natural
49 already
49 belongs
49 house
49 point
49 rather
Aristotle
Metaphysics

IntraText - Concordances

belongs

   Book, Paragraph
1 II, 1 | of it the similar quality belongs to the other things as well ( 2 II, 3 | treats of (and whether it belongs to one science or to more 3 III, 1 | investigation of the causes belongs to one or to more sciences, 4 III, 2 | these matters? If then it belongs to every science alike, 5 III, 2 | science. For the subject belongs to one science, and the 6 III, 4 | so far as some attribute belongs to them universally.~But 7 IV, 2 | opposed to unity-and it belongs to one science to investigate 8 IV, 2 | many senses, but yet it belongs to one science to know them 9 IV, 2 | know them all; for a term belongs to different sciences not 10 IV, 2 | is evident, then, that it belongs to one science to be able 11 IV, 2 | fire, it is clear that it belongs to this science to investigate 12 IV, 2 | plurality, as for instance rest belongs to unity and movement to 13 IV, 2 | considerations too that it belongs to one science to examine 14 IV, 3 | We must state whether it belongs to one or to different sciences 15 IV, 3 | inquiry into these also belongs to one science, and that 16 IV, 3 | studies being qua being belongs the inquiry into these as 17 IV, 3 | on it.~Evidently then it belongs to the philosopher, i.e. 18 IV, 5 | destruction nor generation at all belongs.~And (2) similarly some 19 IV, 5 | that to which the quality belongs. I mean, for instance, that 20 V, 7 | that to which the attribute belongs is, or because the subject 21 V, 28| the differentia or quality belongs is the substratum, which 22 VI, 1 | does not exist, because it belongs to the same kind of thinking 23 VI, 1 | objects, and also that it belongs to the student of nature 24 VI, 1 | clearly the knowledge of it belongs to a theoretical science,- 25 VII, 4 | these compounds also there belongs an essence, e.g. "white 26 VII, 4 | this" is, since thisness belongs only to substances. Therefore 27 VII, 4 | meaning-viz. that this attribute belongs to this subject; or instead 28 VII, 4 | and the like. For as "is" belongs to all things, not however 29 VII, 4 | so too "what a thing is" belongs in the simple sense to substance, 30 VII, 5 | the essence, and essence belongs to substances either alone 31 VII, 6 | which the accidental quality belongs, and the accidental quality, 32 VII, 15| e.g. "two-footed animal" belongs to animal and to the two-footed. ( 33 IX, 1 | sort, so that every potency belongs to the same subject and 34 X, 1 | of these kinds of unity belongs will be one; but "to be 35 X, 6 | the class to which number belongs; for number is plurality 36 X, 8 | a contrariety; and this belongs only to things in the same 37 X, 9 | though this difference belongs to animal in virtue of its 38 XI, 1 | what kind of science it belongs to discuss the difficulties 39 XI, 2 | exist apart by itself and belongs to no sensible thing.-Further, 40 XI, 9 | But each of the categories belongs to all its subjects in either 41 XI, 10| quantity. Therefore infinity belongs to its subject incidentally. 42 XI, 12| same as a unit; for contact belongs to points, but not to units, 43 XII, 1 | movement); but the third kind belongs to another science, if there 44 XII, 7 | better state. And life also belongs to God; for the actuality 45 XII, 8 | moved, and every movement belongs to something that is moved, 46 XII, 9 | thinking that its value belongs to it. Further, whether 47 XIII, 3| considered whether any attribute belongs to a man qua indivisible. 48 XIV, 4 | self-sufficiency and self-maintenance—belongs primarily in some other 49 XIV, 6 | make it plain that goodness belongs to numbers, and that the


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