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Alphabetical    [«  »]
grave 1
graws 1
greasy 2
great 62
greater 31
greatest 23
greece 2
Frequency    [«  »]
64 reason
63 another
63 since
62 great
61 process
60 cannot
60 evaporation
Aristotle
Meteorology

IntraText - Concordances

great

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 3 | volume is not proportionately great where water dissolves into 2 I, 3 | will be disproportionately great. For the spaces left by 3 I, 6 | but that it appears at great intervals of time and only 4 I, 6 | consequently appears at great intervals of time.~A view 5 I, 6 | is not true either. The great comet which appeared at 6 I, 6 | that reflection over so great a space is an impossibility.~ 7 I, 6 | stars. For instance the great comet we mentioned before 8 I, 7 | circular motion. It, and a great part of the air that is 9 I, 7 | And at the time of the great comet the winter was dry 10 I, 8 | sun would terminate at no great distance from the earth, 11 I, 10| water and the heat is not so great as to dry up the moisture 12 I, 10| burden cannot lift it to a great height but soon lets it 13 I, 11| and dew: only there is a great deal of the former and little 14 I, 11| due to the cooling of a great amount of vapour, for the 15 I, 11| season or country. For a great deal of heat is still present 16 I, 11| there still survives in it a great deal of the heat which caused 17 I, 12| does not occur at all at a great height: yet it ought to 18 I, 12| been observed moving with a great noise close to the earth, 19 I, 13| earth and so flows from a great reservoir, all the rivers 20 I, 13| many places. They receive a great deal of water falling as 21 I, 13| Phasis, and very many other great rivers besides. Now the 22 I, 13| which there are said to be great lakes, yet they say that 23 I, 13| sea, is considerable. Many great rivers fall into it and 24 I, 14| determined periods there comes a great winter of a great year and 25 I, 14| comes a great winter of a great year and with it excess 26 I, 14| density and coldness; for great, dense, and cold mountains 27 I, 14| abundance of rain falls in the great winter it tends to make 28 II, 2 | indeed the difference is so great that in the one case it 29 II, 3 | such a striking effect in a great quantity of water and not 30 II, 3 | cause the secretion such a great quantity of water; especially 31 II, 3 | exhalation which accounts for its great quantity. Now since, as 32 II, 3 | incorporating with itself a great quantity of dry evaporation 33 II, 3 | the rain that falls with a great quantity of this stuff. 34 II, 4 | by day.) But there is a great quantity of fire and heat 35 II, 4 | river, even if there is a great quantity of it, but only 36 II, 4 | So too with the winds; a great quantity of air might be 37 II, 4 | is because there is now a great excess of the vaporous, 38 II, 4 | and it prevails over a great and continuous stretch of 39 II, 4 | escape observation becomes a great wind as it passes on.~We 40 II, 5 | throw a little fuel into a great fire, it is often burnt 41 II, 6 | it and drives before it a great quantity of such matter. 42 II, 8 | liable to earthquakes. A great and therefore violent wind 43 II, 8 | the onrush of the sea in a great mass thrusts it back into 44 II, 8 | fills the cavities. Thus a great wind is compressed into 45 II, 8 | suppose, then (to compare great things with small), that 46 II, 8 | finally it burst, and a great wind came out of it and 47 II, 8 | When the sea breaks in great waves the marks left on 48 II, 8 | back and heaps it up in a great mass in one place. Given 49 II, 8 | not easily accumulate in great quantity in the position 50 II, 9 | analogous, to compare small with great, to the sound we hear in 51 III, 1 | this secretion issues in a great and continuous current the 52 III, 1 | inflames it.~When there is a great quantity of exhalation and 53 III, 4 | When sight is strained to a great distance the appearance 54 III, 5 | of the sphere will be a great circle. Let it be A (for 55 III, 5 | small and the invisible arc great, and the farther the sun 56 III, 5 | reason for this being the great size of the visible arc, 57 IV, 1 | change. For the same reason a great quantity of a thing putrefies 58 IV, 3 | density of the body is too great for it-to-be mastered, as 59 IV, 3 | surrounding liquid is too great to have no effect at all, 60 IV, 6 | purification of the metal involves great waste and loss of weight. 61 IV, 9 | they can be drawn out to a great length and contracted again. 62 IV, 10| contains much heat and a great proportion of earth, as


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