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| Alphabetical [« »] blue 1 bodies 156 bodily 2 body 72 boil 7 boiled 16 boiling 30 | Frequency [« »] 74 can 73 either 73 way 72 body 71 most 70 due 68 moist | Aristotle Meteorology IntraText - Concordances body |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 3 | consider it to be one kind of body or more than one? And if 2 I, 3 | motions is full of that body.~This is an opinion we are 3 I, 3 | seem to have assumed that a body that was eternally in motion 4 I, 3 | in nature; and, as such a body was different from any of 5 I, 3 | we affirm to consist of a body distinct both from fire 6 I, 3 | the motion as follows. The body that lies below the circular 7 I, 3 | the earth, and what is the body that fills it.~As for the 8 I, 3 | by the motion of a solid body.~This then is one reason 9 I, 4 | continuously with the main body.) Then it is called a "goat". 10 I, 4 | when it "shoots" a single body that is thrown? Apparently 11 I, 12| the water comes down in a body, and this happens when the 12 I, 13| the water descends in a body as rain, so too we must 13 II, 2 | be the original and main body of water is this. It seems 14 II, 2 | come from it. Thus the main body of fire is in the upper 15 II, 2 | another difficulty. If this body of water is the origin and 16 II, 2 | food when it enters the body is sweet, yet the residuum 17 II, 2 | and the other parts of the body according to their several 18 II, 2 | when it is gathered in a body, and indeed the difference 19 II, 3 | as identically the same body, or whether it did not exist 20 II, 3 | Even in the case of the body it is a question how the 21 II, 3 | washing the stuff out of the body), then no doubt the admixture 22 II, 3 | the sea salt.~Now in the body stuff of this kind, viz. 23 II, 4 | Just as in the case of the body when the stomach is dry 24 II, 8 | flows outwards in a single body, sometimes inwards, and 25 II, 8 | Next we must find out what body has the greatest motive 26 II, 8 | This will certainly be the body that naturally moves farthest 27 II, 8 | force. Again, the rarest body, that which can most readily 28 II, 8 | pass through every other body, is that which naturally 29 II, 8 | follows in a continuous body in the direction in which 30 II, 8 | that often runs through the body after passing water as the 31 II, 8 | inside, but moves in a single body, its strength must be greater. 32 II, 8 | escape. Any throbbing in the body does not cease suddenly 33 II, 8 | wind gives way the whole body of the sea, driven on by 34 II, 9 | rushes on the flame in a body. So in the clouds, the exhalation 35 III, 1 | But if it is secreted in a body and is denser, that is, 36 III, 1 | The fact that it issues in body explains its violence: it 37 III, 1 | first part of the moving body is deflected because of 38 III, 1 | quantity of it rushed in a body from the place from which 39 III, 5 | place when the luminous body is rising or setting the 40 III, 5 | semi-circle; if the luminous body is above the horizon it 41 III, 5 | smallest when the luminous body culminates. First let the 42 III, 5 | First let the luminous body be appearing on the horizon 43 III, 6 | sight is reflected in a body and is thrown on the sun 44 IV, 1 | present together in the same body are the subjects of that 45 IV, 2 | is the proper heat of the body. In some cases of concoction 46 IV, 3 | moisture to itself. Not every body admits of the process of 47 IV, 3 | it but the density of the body is too great for it-to-be 48 IV, 3 | undetermined matter in a body due to lack of heat in the 49 IV, 3 | concoction of food in the body is like boiling, for it 50 IV, 3 | agent is the heat of the body. So, too, certain forms 51 IV, 4 | determines the nature of the body; thus some bodies partake 52 IV, 4 | water." Thus the determined body involves them both. Of the 53 IV, 4 | involve earth and water. Every body shows the quality of that 54 IV, 5 | 5~A body determined by its own boundary 55 IV, 6 | melting of a solidified body. The first, condensation, 56 IV, 7 | 7~If a body contains more water than 57 IV, 9 | they cannot be melted. Any body that is to be softened by 58 IV, 9 | of the stuff of which the body itself consists-and that 59 IV, 9 | sometimes the pores upon which a body sinks in are not empty ( 60 IV, 9 | something softer than the body itself which is to contract. 61 IV, 9 | when this is not possible a body is not malleable. All malleable 62 IV, 9 | instrument dividing it, for a body is said to split when it 63 IV, 9 | that it can be cut. For, a body being divided into many 64 IV, 9 | them.~The fumes of a woody body are called smoke. (I mean 65 IV, 10| which, as it leaves the body, draws out the moisture 66 IV, 10| distinguishing whether a body consists of earth or of 67 IV, 11| must predominate in every body that consists of one or 68 IV, 11| elements simply, unless such a body contains foreign heat as 69 IV, 11| putrefying bodies: the putrefying body contains the heat which 70 IV, 11| the waste products of the body, are products of putrefaction. 71 IV, 11| is predominantly water a body is cold (water being the 72 IV, 12| they are not unless the body is thoroughly corrupted