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| Alphabetical [« »] chaff 1 chains 1 chamber-pots 1 change 39 changed 2 changes 14 changing 2 | Frequency [« »] 40 day 40 made 40 while 39 change 39 flow 39 formed 39 makes | Aristotle Meteorology IntraText - Concordances change |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | them and showing how they change into one another-and becoming 2 I, 3 | perpetually in a state of change.~So much to explain why 3 I, 8 | times. Consequently with the change of the sun’s position the 4 I, 8 | position the milky way ought to change its position too: but we 5 I, 14| always moist or dry, but they change according as rivers come 6 I, 14| become dry; and when rivers change and disappear in one part 7 I, 14| becoming dry. Here, too, the change is gradual and lasts a long 8 I, 14| cause of such events to be change in the universe, in the 9 I, 14| there is necessarily some change in the whole world, but 10 I, 14| moist, the sea must needs change correspondingly. And if 11 II, 2 | element, and any parts which change and mix with the other elements 12 II, 2 | does, sets up processes of change and becoming and decay, 13 II, 3 | satisfactory than to suppose a change in the whole world in order 14 II, 3 | its parts are in continual change, like air and sweet water 15 II, 3 | are in a constant state of change, but the form and the quantity 16 II, 3 | differ in that some of them change more rapidly or more slowly 17 II, 3 | that which comes down again change their situations.~There 18 II, 3 | why they persist, how they change, what their nature is, and 19 II, 5 | because they place at a change of season (namely of summer 20 II, 5 | many days) and a state of change is always indefinite and 21 II, 7 | horizon always changes with a change in our position, which proves 22 II, 9 | they are in a process of change and contract and condense 23 III, 4 | no difference whether the change is in the object seen or. 24 III, 4 | is relatively strong the change is to red; the next stage 25 III, 4 | gives violet. No further change is visible, but three completes 26 III, 4 | most other things), and the change into the rest is imperceptible 27 III, 6 | savours, due to a qualitative change in actual water. Copper 28 IV, 1 | determine, conjoin, and change things of the same kind 29 IV, 1 | becoming, that is, natural change, is always the work of these 30 IV, 1 | True natural becoming is a change introduced by these powers 31 IV, 1 | prevail over it or set up any change. So too anything that is 32 IV, 1 | object, and so it causes no change. For the same reason a great 33 IV, 3 | to boil a thing but the change and concoction in it were 34 IV, 7 | in it; the is due to the change of the air into water as 35 IV, 9 | and straightened which can change from being curved to being 36 IV, 9 | straightening consist in the change or motion to the straight 37 IV, 9 | or the concave without a change of length. For if we added " 38 IV, 9 | down, the former being a change to the convex, the latter 39 IV, 9 | for there is a reciprocal change of place of all its parts).