| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] drags 1 draw 11 drawing 2 drawn 21 draws 6 dregs 1 drew 2 | Frequency [« »] 21 apt 21 comets 21 consequently 21 drawn 21 milky 21 night 21 size | Aristotle Meteorology IntraText - Concordances drawn |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 3| the distinctions already drawn and then explain the "milky 2 II, 2| is light and is all of it drawn up: the salt water is heavy 3 II, 2| drinkable part of it has been drawn away by the natural animal 4 II, 3| about the earth and has been drawn up by the sun, or whether 5 II, 3| and why, if salt water was drawn up then, that is not the 6 II, 3| moisture departed and was drawn up by the sun and that what 7 II, 3| saltness is always being drawn up with the sweet water. 8 II, 3| it is continually being drawn up and becoming sweet; this 9 II, 3| what it was when it was drawn up, and its weight makes 10 II, 6| clearness’ sake we have drawn the circle of the horizon, 11 II, 9| especially it is said to be drawn down from the upper ether. 12 III, 1| the cloud burns as it is drawn downwards, that is, when 13 III, 5| produced). Now the lines drawn from H and K to a point 14 III, 5| one another, and no lines drawn from the same points to 15 III, 5| lines in the same plane drawn from the same points to 16 III, 5| K there will have been drawn lines with the same ratio 17 III, 5| shown, as before, that lines drawn to different points in the 18 IV, 3| moisture contained in it is drawn out of it by the heat in 19 IV, 3| the better it would have drawn the moisture to itself. 20 IV, 9| made to elongate, for being drawn out is a movement of the 21 IV, 9| chains, for then they can be drawn out to a great length and