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Alphabetical    [«  »]
efficient 20
efflux 3
effluxion 1
egg 125
egg-like 2
egg-shell 2
egg-shells 1
Frequency    [«  »]
140 young
135 others
129 come
125 egg
124 now
123 heat
122 any
Aristotle
On the Generation of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

egg

    Book,  Paragraph
1 I, 8 | then they perfected the egg in themselves they must 2 I, 8 | each uterus seems to be an egg, at any rate in the small 3 I, 10| produce eggs internally. The egg is perfect, for so only 4 I, 10| animal be generated from an egg, and nothing comes from 5 I, 11| same as in birds, for the egg descends and the young is 6 I, 12| in this is contained the egg or foetus, which needs guarding, 7 I, 14| each side, in which the egg is produced.~ 8 I, 15| animals, for it contains an egg which is at first indivisible 9 I, 20| as one animal from one egg (for twin eggs are really 10 I, 21| trodden by the cock before the egg has begun to whiten and 11 I, 21| semen is mingled with the egg or exists in it, or that 12 I, 21| heat and concoction, as the egg acquires nutriment so long 13 I, 23| first olives..." For as the egg is an embryo, a certain 14 II, 1 | bloodless animals either lay an egg or give birth to a scolex. 15 II, 1 | The difference between egg and scolex is this: an egg 16 II, 1 | egg and scolex is this: an egg is that from a part of which 17 II, 1 | ovipara some produce the egg in a perfect condition ( 18 II, 1 | animal is perfect but the egg and the scolex are imperfect, 19 II, 1 | they either lay a perfect egg or are viviparous after 20 II, 1 | viviparous after laying an egg within themselves. For birds 21 II, 1 | their heat produce a perfect egg, but because of their dryness 22 II, 1 | their dryness it is only an egg; the cartilaginous fishes 23 II, 1 | dry and earthy nature, the egg they produce is soft; for 24 II, 1 | in themselves, for if the egg were laid externally it 25 II, 1 | moist also lay eggs, but the egg is imperfect; at the same 26 II, 1 | an earthy nature and the egg they produce is imperfect, 27 II, 1 | 3) those that lay their egg imperfect, as the scaly 28 II, 1 | it develops resembles an egg; how so we shall explain 29 II, 1 | a perfect animal, but an egg, and this egg is perfect. 30 II, 1 | animal, but an egg, and this egg is perfect. Those whose 31 II, 1 | colder than these produce an egg, but an imperfect one, which 32 II, 1 | class does not even lay an egg from itself; but so far 33 II, 1 | pupa is equivalent to an egg); then from this it is that 34 II, 1 | produced as a scolex or an egg; others receive it from 35 II, 3 | produced by any animal, the egg so forming has in it the 36 II, 4 | oviparous; they develop the egg into a perfect condition, 37 II, 4 | and then in some cases the egg is set free as with creatures 38 II, 4 | animal is produced from the egg within the mother’s body; 39 II, 4 | when the nutriment from the egg is consumed, development 40 II, 4 | uterus, and therefore the egg is not set free from the 41 II, 4 | parts differentiated in the egg after separation from the 42 II, 5 | in the sense in which an egg of wood or stone is so called, 43 II, 6 | mother and produced from an egg, within which the differentiation 44 II, 6 | produced as a scolex or an egg; those which do breathe 45 III, 1 | produce a perfect hard-shelled egg, unless it be injured by 46 III, 1 | produce the young alive, the egg changing previously from 47 III, 1 | uterus to another; and their egg is soft-shelled and of one 48 III, 1 | produce the young from the egg within itself, the so-called " 49 III, 1 | oviparous fishes produce an egg of one colour, but this 50 III, 1 | the umbilical cord, so the egg grows through this matter 51 III, 1 | externally birds produce their egg perfect, fish imperfect, 52 III, 1 | yolk. For the matter of the egg is secreted from the blood [ 53 III, 1 | The one part, then, of the egg is nearer the form of the 54 III, 1 | and therefore at first the egg in birds appears white and 55 III, 1 | the eggs as in a single egg, all the yellow part coming 56 III, 2 | eggs at the point where the egg is attached to the uterus, 57 III, 2 | the rest. Therefore the egg is harder at this point 58 III, 2 | why the sharp end of the egg comes out of the hen later 59 III, 2 | comes out later, and the egg is attached at the point 60 III, 2 | about the growth of the egg; how is it derived from 61 III, 2 | becomes of this when the egg is perfected? It does not 62 III, 2 | does not come out with the egg as the cord does with animals; 63 III, 2 | with animals; for when its egg is perfected the shell forms 64 III, 2 | that it is only after the egg is perfected that it becomes 65 III, 2 | other way and cast out the egg too soon, it appears still 66 III, 2 | running through it. As the egg becomes larger this is more 67 III, 2 | becomes smaller, and when the egg is perfected this end is 68 III, 2 | yolk from this. When the egg is perfected, the whole 69 III, 2 | now the extreme end of the egg itself.~The egg is discharged 70 III, 2 | end of the egg itself.~The egg is discharged in the opposite 71 III, 2 | principle leading, but the egg is discharged as it were 72 III, 2 | has been stated, that the egg is attached to the uterus 73 III, 2 | bird is produced out of the egg by the mother’s incubating 74 III, 2 | developing out of part of the egg, and receiving growth and 75 III, 2 | material of the creature in the egg but also the nourishment 76 III, 2 | produces the nourishment in the egg along with it. Whereas the 77 III, 2 | does this for birds in the egg. The opposite, however, 78 III, 2 | is perfected within the egg more quickly in sunshiny 79 III, 2 | this embryo, whether in an egg or in the mother’s uterus, 80 III, 2 | quadrupeds, which lay the egg with a hard shell. These 81 III, 3 | low down lay an imperfect egg for the reason previously 82 III, 3 | fishes produce a perfect egg within themselves but are 83 III, 3 | this alone lays a perfect egg externally. The reason is 84 III, 3 | their exit. And while the egg of the cartilaginous fishes 85 III, 3 | colder than birds), the egg of the frog-fish alone is 86 III, 3 | young are produced from the egg in the same way both with 87 III, 3 | begins on the surface of the egg but not where it is attached 88 III, 3 | end and that is where the egg was attached. The reason 89 III, 3 | The reason is that the egg of birds is separated from 90 III, 3 | cartilaginous fishes the egg is still attached to the 91 III, 3 | develops upon the surface the egg is consumed by it just as 92 III, 3 | for in some of them the egg is so detached when it is 93 III, 3 | the opposite end, for the egg is of the same nature both 94 III, 3 | the cartilaginous fish the egg is not detached from the 95 III, 3 | umbilicus to the uterus when the egg has been consumed. From 96 III, 3 | previously also, while the egg was still round the young, 97 III, 3 | connects with the whole egg (for it is not divided into 98 III, 3 | fish that produce a perfect egg within themselves but are 99 III, 4 | all laying an imperfect egg except the frog-fish; the 100 III, 4 | the development from the egg runs on the same lines as 101 III, 4 | beginnings and the outside of the egg is harder. The growth of 102 III, 4 | harder. The growth of the egg is like that of a scolex, 103 III, 5 | oviparous, produce a perfect egg, and it does not increase 104 III, 7 | imperfect than a fish’s egg. It is the male that brings 105 III, 7 | about the perfection of the egg both of birds and of fishes, 106 III, 7 | externally, because the egg is imperfect when deposited; 107 III, 7 | treading take place before the egg changes so far that the 108 III, 7 | from one another, the birds egg already contains the principle 109 III, 7 | often said, wherefore the egg itself is perfect only as 110 III, 7 | the class of birds, the egg would have been produced 111 III, 7 | considered as a plant, the egg is perfect, but in so far 112 III, 8 | animals also lay an imperfect egg for the same reason as fishes. 113 III, 8 | naturally expected, for the egg is under the female and 114 III, 8 | developing is attached to the egg by its front part, for here 115 III, 9 | those that lay a perfect egg, the first embryo grows 116 III, 9 | the ovipara produce the egg in a perfect condition, 117 III, 9 | take away the shell of the egg, wherefore they call the 118 III, 9 | full size, become a sort of egg, for the husk about them 119 III, 9 | growing in size, were a soft egg. Similar to this is also 120 III, 9 | there comes forth as from an egg an animal perfected in its 121 III, 9 | nothing of the kind. For an egg is also of such a nature 122 III, 9 | differentiated and becomes a perfect egg. Sometimes the scolex contains 123 III, 11| generation we say is from an egg.~It is plain then that, 124 III, 11| of these two, scolex or egg. But it is less reasonable 125 III, 11| latter consume the whole egg, whereas in the scolex,


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