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lamp 4
lamplight 1
lamps 2
land 35
lapse 4
large 17
larger 8
Frequency    [«  »]
36 others
36 see
36 upper
35 land
34 appears
34 liquid
33 after
Aristotle
Meteorology

IntraText - Concordances

land

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 4 | into the sea and on the dry land, both by night and by day 2 I, 13| below the earth off the land of the Coraxi about the 3 I, 13| three hundred stadia from land, there comes up sweet water 4 I, 14| And so the relation of land to sea changes too and a 5 I, 14| place does not always remain land or sea throughout all time, 6 I, 14| but where there was dry land there comes to be sea, and 7 I, 14| one day comes to be dry land. But we must suppose these 8 I, 14| and encroached upon the land anywhere, it necessarily 9 I, 14| recedes; again, if the dry land has encroached on the sea 10 I, 14| and this goes on until the land is unable to maintain any 11 I, 14| when it first settled in a land that was changing from a 12 I, 14| first, or when, or what the land was like when they came. 13 I, 14| Here it is obvious that the land is continually getting drier 14 I, 14| neighbouring peoples settled in the land gradually as the marshes 15 I, 14| natural, since the lower land came to be inhabited later 16 I, 14| most in the newly formed land. But in time this land changes 17 I, 14| formed land. But in time this land changes its character, and 18 I, 14| deteriorate. This happened to the land of Argos and Mycenae in 19 I, 14| the Trojan wars the Argive land was marshy and could only 20 I, 14| population, whereas the land of Mycenae was in good condition ( 21 I, 14| reason we have mentioned: the land of Mycenae has become completely 22 I, 14| barren, while the Argive land that was formerly barren 23 I, 14| the sea has invaded the land. But we must not suppose 24 I, 14| facts prove this. The whole land of the Egyptians, whom we 25 I, 14| sea was higher than the land. So he first, and Darius 26 I, 14| lower and hollower than the land to the seaward of it. For 27 I, 14| and after it lakes and dry land, but in course of time the 28 I, 14| not always either sea or land, but that all this changes 29 I, 14| the earth are not always land or sea and why that is so: 30 II, 1 | that in straits, where the land on either side contracts 31 II, 1 | observed, but where the land narrows and contracts the 32 II, 5 | records of journeys by sea and land bear this out. They make 33 II, 5 | own north wind is like a land breeze and does not even 34 II, 8 | burst out and overwhelm the land. This is what happened in 35 II, 8 | earthquakes than those near land. First, the volume of the


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