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| Alphabetical [« »] tidal 3 tide 1 till 5 time 54 times 7 tin 2 to 874 | Frequency [« »] 54 hence 54 let 54 say 54 time 54 vapour 53 kind 53 part | Aristotle Meteorology IntraText - Concordances time |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 3 | demonstrations have by this time proved to us that it is 2 I, 6 | appears at great intervals of time and only rises a little 3 I, 6 | appears at great intervals of time.~A view like theirs was 4 I, 6 | horizon together at the same time. Further, comets are often 5 I, 6 | comet which appeared at the time of the earthquake in Achaea 6 I, 7 | more clearly later when the time comes to speak of the winds.- 7 I, 7 | in the west. And at the time of the great comet the winter 8 I, 8 | fell from heaven at the time of Phaethon’s downfall. 9 I, 8 | it being visible at any time of the night), but it shows 10 I, 11| region from which and the time during which the vapour 11 I, 12| the air for any space of time. Nor can we say that the 12 I, 12| water falls in a certain time and the cold is sufficient 13 I, 12| takes place in a shorter time than its fall. The nearer 14 I, 14| land or sea throughout all time, but where there was dry 15 I, 14| remain moist for a certain time, and then dry up and grow 16 I, 14| when at their full, the time must come when this place 17 I, 14| gradually and in periods of time which are so immense compared 18 I, 14| all. So a long period of time is likely to elapse from 19 I, 14| remembers and the lapse of time destroys all record even 20 I, 14| supposed to lose account of the time when it first settled in 21 I, 14| gradual and lasts a long time and men do not remember 22 I, 14| marshes dried, the lapse of time has hidden the beginning 23 I, 14| necessarily marshy for a longer time since the water always lies 24 I, 14| newly formed land. But in time this land changes its character, 25 I, 14| Mycenae in Greece. In the time of the Trojan wars the Argive 26 I, 14| place. The deluge in the time of Deucalion, for instance, 27 I, 14| that it suffices for a long time. We have seen that some 28 I, 14| almost everlasting. But as time goes on places of the latter 29 I, 14| dry land, but in course of time the water that was left 30 I, 14| enough, in the course of time the strait must become like 31 I, 14| there will be no end to time and the world is eternal, 32 I, 14| effect may be fulfilled, but time cannot. And this will be 33 I, 14| this changes in course of time.~So we have explained that 34 II, 2 | with the rivers: all the time they are flowing their water 35 II, 3 | come into being at the same time. It follows that if the 36 II, 3 | sucked in the sea: the first time she made the mountains visible; 37 II, 3 | mountains visible; the second time the islands; and when she 38 II, 3 | sucks it in for the last time she will dry it up entirely. 39 II, 3 | that for the same period of time that sweet water must have 40 II, 5 | evaporation has not had time to develop or that it has 41 II, 5 | the dog-star: not at the time when the sun is closest 42 II, 5 | solstice: for from that time onwards the wind tends to 43 II, 6 | solstice blow about the time of the spring equinox, but 44 II, 7 | the earth grows dry in time of drought and breaks up, 45 II, 8 | dry for winds to form. In time of drought the air is full 46 II, 8 | Heracleia in Pontus and some time past at the island Hiera, 47 II, 9 | and were produced when the time came and not generated at 48 II, 9 | hand out of its stock from time to time. They are concretions 49 II, 9 | of its stock from time to time. They are concretions in 50 III, 1 | straight line: at the same time it is pushed on from behind; 51 III, 2 | than two rainbows at one time. Each of them is three-coloured; 52 III, 5 | may be a rainbow at any time of the day, but in the longer 53 IV, 7 | either. Fire and the lapse of time thicken and whiten it. The 54 IV, 9 | nature of air by the lapse of time: as they perish away they