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Alphabetical    [«  »]
thickly 1
thigh 1
thin 3
thing 67
thing-nature 1
things 86
think 12
Frequency    [«  »]
71 most
70 due
68 moist
67 thing
65 both
64 matter
64 reason
Aristotle
Meteorology

IntraText - Concordances

thing

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 3 | air that is nearest to a thing in rapid motion which is 2 I, 3 | the more and the faster a thing moves, the more apt it is 3 I, 4 | phenomena are one and the same thing, and are due to the same 4 I, 4 | look more like that of a thing thrown than like a running 5 I, 4 | of a "star" is the same thing as when you put an exhalation 6 I, 4 | quickly and looks like a thing thrown, and not as if one 7 I, 4 | thrown, and not as if one thing after another caught fire. 8 I, 8 | assume that the same kind of thing holds good of the milky 9 I, 10| and not less. This is a thing which we can often observe 10 I, 11| hoar-frost are one and the same thing, and so are rain and dew: 11 I, 12| they are warm. The same thing, we must suppose, happens 12 I, 13| wishing to say a clever thing, assert that all the winds 13 I, 13| In Greece this kind of thing happens on quite a small 14 I, 14| recognize the same kind of thing in this case too. Where 15 II, 2 | is carried up. The same thing happens in animal bodies. 16 II, 3 | reason-clearly the same thing must make it persist for 17 II, 3 | there came to be any such thing in the earth requires explanation. 18 II, 3 | by experiment. The same thing is true in every case of 19 II, 3 | whole bulk. For the same thing is true of the earth as 20 II, 3 | there in the sea. The same thing is done in salting fish.~ 21 III, 1 | least resistance. The same thing happens to the next part, 22 III, 1 | This exhalation splits the thing it strikes but does not 23 III, 1 | of them forms of the same thing and wherein they all differ.~ 24 III, 2 | impossible that the figure of a thing should be reflected in them, 25 III, 4 | certain way: and the same thing holds good here. So the 26 IV, 1 | in a certain way that a thing is said to be "easy to determine" 27 IV, 1 | matter underlying a given thing when they are in a certain 28 IV, 1 | the matter they generate a thing: if they are not, and the 29 IV, 1 | partial destruction, when a thing’s nature is perverted). 30 IV, 1 | in moisture, for it is a thing’s peculiar heat that attracts 31 IV, 1 | whereas what affects a thing does master it. Nor does 32 IV, 1 | less apt to putrefy than a thing at rest, for the motion 33 IV, 1 | reason a great quantity of a thing putrefies less readily than 34 IV, 2 | taken place we say that a thing has been perfected and has 35 IV, 2 | is the proper heat of a thing that sets up this perfecting, 36 IV, 2 | it has been reached the thing has some use and we say 37 IV, 2 | between them exists in it a thing maintains its nature. Hence 38 IV, 3 | process the nature of the thing that is ripening incorporates 39 IV, 3 | moisture. Consequently a raw thing is either spirituous or 40 IV, 3 | contained in the moisture of the thing boiled, and the word is 41 IV, 3 | draws it into itself. But a thing that is being boiled behaves 42 IV, 3 | word, though the kind of thing intended is the same, the 43 IV, 3 | if a man were to boil a thing but the change and concoction 44 IV, 3 | to that of the fire, the thing will have been broiled and 45 IV, 3 | If the process leaves the thing drier at the end the agent 46 IV, 3 | and the moisture in the thing cannot be secreted but is 47 IV, 3 | the same general kind of thing, as we said, is found in 48 IV, 3 | It would be the kind of thing that would happen if there 49 IV, 3 | quantity of water in the thing undergoing the process. 50 IV, 4 | primarily belong to a determined thing, for anything made up of 51 IV, 4 | so compared with another thing. Now relatively to one another 52 IV, 6 | opposite effects upon the same thing. Again, water solidifies 53 IV, 7 | is evidence of the same thing, for such blood is of the 54 IV, 8 | capacities of action. (For a thing is white, fragrant, sonant, 55 IV, 8 | aptitude or inaptitude of a thing to be affected in a certain 56 IV, 9 | straight or to a curve, for a thing is said to be in process 57 IV, 9 | straight", we should have a thing bent and straight at once, 58 IV, 9 | part of the surface of a thing in response to pressure 59 IV, 9 | remains in contact with the thing moved, of impact when the 60 IV, 9 | not, e.g. potter’s clay. A thing is fissile when it is apt 61 IV, 9 | it is lengthwise that a thing can be split and crosswise 62 IV, 9 | breadths it is apt to be cut.~A thing is viscous when, being moist 63 IV, 12| with face and hand. What a thing is always determined by 64 IV, 12| determined by its function: a thing really is itself when it 65 IV, 12| when it can see. When a thing cannot do so it is that 66 IV, 12| cannot do so it is that thing only in name, like a dead 67 IV, 12| For we know the cause of a thing and its definition when


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