| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] slower 1 slowest 1 slowly 1 small 43 smaller 10 smallest 5 smell 1 | Frequency [« »] 44 seen 43 opposite 43 reflection 43 small 43 south 43 through 43 two | Aristotle Meteorology IntraText - Concordances small |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 3 | bodies are all of them of a small size, because they so to 2 I, 3 | proportion between any given small quantity of water and the 3 I, 4 | catches fire at the sides in small portions but continuously 4 I, 4 | exhalation is scattered in small parts and in many directions 5 I, 6 | is above the horizon is small, and that below it many 6 I, 6 | large and that below it small. For under these circumstances 7 I, 9 | When the water falls in small drops it is called a drizzle; 8 I, 10| that is being raised is small. When this cools and descends 9 I, 11| a single day and from a small area, as its quick formation 10 I, 12| carried up owing to their small size and rest on the iar ( 11 I, 12| swimming on the air just as small particles of earth and gold 12 I, 12| formed by the union of many small, and so fall down. This 13 I, 13| just as above the earth small drops form and these join 14 I, 13| thing happens on quite a small scale, but the lake at the 15 I, 14| and could only support a small population, whereas the 16 I, 14| has taken place in this small district must be supposed 17 I, 14| be in process because of small and trifling changes, when 18 I, 14| the sources of rivers are small or porous and stony and 19 I, 14| sandbank, there first formed a small lake behind it. Later it 20 II, 1 | contracts an open sea into a small space, the sea appears to 21 II, 5 | When the evaporation is small in amount and faint the 22 II, 8 | compare great things with small), that what happens in the 23 II, 8 | air is first broken up in small particles and then the wind 24 II, 8 | because the secretion is small). As the sea is to the shore 25 II, 8 | local and often affect a small district only; whereas winds 26 II, 9 | is analogous, to compare small with great, to the sound 27 II, 9 | hissing is really boiling on a small scale: for when that which 28 III, 1 | exhalation is secreted in small and scattered quantities 29 III, 1 | occasion what is seen in small fires appeared on a much 30 III, 2 | those mirrors which are so small as to be indivisible for 31 III, 3 | uniform and consists of small parts. Hence in itself it 32 III, 3 | contiguous: each of them is too small to be visible, but their 33 III, 4 | each of the mirrors is so small as to be invisible and what 34 III, 4 | the reflection being from small particles of water), but 35 III, 4 | presents this colour, only small and fragmentary appearances 36 III, 4 | reflection is from very small particles continuous with 37 III, 5 | while the invisible arc is small, but when the sun is south 38 III, 5 | equator the visible arc is small and the invisible arc great, 39 III, 5 | solstice the visible arcs are small, and the contrary is necessarily 40 III, 6 | sun: the mirrors are too small for the shape of the sun 41 III, 6 | when it is reflected from a small mirror to a very distant 42 IV, 3 | no effect at all, but too small to carry out the process 43 IV, 8 | that their pores are too small for the particles of water