| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] o 6 oar 1 oars 3 object 29 objection 2 objective 1 objects 7 | Frequency [« »] 30 world 29 away 29 little 29 object 29 qualities 29 s 28 down | Aristotle Meteorology IntraText - Concordances object |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 4| under these circumstances an object always moves obliquely. 2 I, 8| mirror and the whole of the object were severally at rest, 3 I, 8| But if the mirror and the object move, keeping the same distance 4 I, 8| and so does the sun, the object to which our sight is reflected; 5 II, 4| by the fall of some large object without flowing from any 6 II, 9| reflected from it to some bright object: hence the phenomenon occurs 7 III, 1| rapidity passes through an object before setting fire to it 8 III, 1| slower one does blacken the object, but passes through it before 9 III, 1| is going to strike, the object moves before it is struck, 10 III, 1| the way and falls on the object first. Thunder, too, splits 11 III, 1| exhalation that strikes the object and that which makes the 12 III, 2| sun or some other bright object takes place.~The rainbow 13 III, 2| reflected from air and any object with a smooth surface just 14 III, 2| The colour of a bright object sometimes appears bright 15 III, 4| renders the colour of an object only, but not its shape. 16 III, 4| is opposite, or any other object bright enough to make the 17 III, 4| sight to be reflected to the object then the reflection must 18 III, 4| render the colour of the object without its shape. Since 19 III, 4| the negation of sight: an object is black because sight fails; 20 III, 4| whether the change is in the object seen or. in the sight, the 21 III, 4| appearance of the distant object is affected in a certain 22 III, 6| mirror to a very distant object. (This is why a halo is 23 IV, 1| failure is partial, the object is imperfectly boiled or 24 IV, 1| being less than that in the object does not prevail over it 25 IV, 1| that pre-existing in the object, and so it causes no change. 26 IV, 2| natural and proper heat of an object perfects the corresponding 27 IV, 2| proper matter of any given object. For when concoction has 28 IV, 2| the heat connatural to the object, and as long as the ratio 29 IV, 3| quantity of moisture in the object undergoing the process of