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Alphabetical [« »] kestrel 1 kidney 1 kidneys 2 kind 119 kindred 2 kinds 34 kingdom 1 | Frequency [« »] 124 now 123 heat 122 any 119 kind 118 comes 117 many 115 birds | Aristotle On the Generation of Animals IntraText - Concordances kind |
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1 I, 1 | the peculiarities of each kind, explaining how each part 2 I, 1 | generate offspring of the same kind, yet other bloodless animals 3 I, 1 | not offspring of the same kind; such are all that come 4 I, 1 | union of animals of the same kind generate also after their 5 I, 1 | generate also after their kind, but all which are not produced 6 I, 1 | indeed, but produce another kind, and the offspring is neither 7 I, 1 | again from them another kind of creature and again another 8 I, 1 | plants we find in the same kind some trees which bear fruit 9 I, 11| yawning or anything of the kind, and even when empty it 10 I, 16| not a creature of the same kind, but only a scolex, and 11 I, 18| very first is of such a kind that blood and flesh can 12 I, 18| or in something of this kind. It is clear, then, if we 13 I, 18| from parents of the same kind nor from parents of a different 14 I, 18| from parents of a different kind, as flies and the various 15 I, 18| of similar nature but a kind of scolex. It is plain in 16 I, 18| the young of a different kind are not produced by semen 17 I, 18| they imply that it is a kind of waste-product. But these 18 I, 18| individuals of the same kind as compared with each other, 19 I, 19| and if anything of the kind occurs the flow is interfered 20 I, 20| because it does not differ in kind at any rate this does not 21 I, 22| motion of some definite kind, a motion varying with the 22 I, 23| them participate also in a kind of knowledge, some more 23 I, 23| sense-perception, and this is a kind of knowledge. (If we consider 24 I, 23| treasure to gain even this kind of knowledge rather than 25 II, 1 | wherefore even plants have some kind of life; but the class of 26 II, 1 | in it? But nothing of the kind appears to be in it, nothing 27 II, 3 | become surrounded by some kind of covering on heating, 28 II, 4 | come into being of the same kind as the former was going 29 II, 4 | if animals of a different kind are crossed (and this is 30 II, 4 | say that nothing of the kind happens with the organic 31 II, 4 | upon milk, for rennet is a kind of milk containing vital 32 II, 5 | detail later.~If there is any kind of animal which is female 33 II, 5 | nor female, as eels and a kind of mullets found in stagnant 34 II, 6 | cause of anything of this kind is to seek for a beginning 35 II, 6 | more than one, varying in kind and not all of the same 36 II, 6 | and not all of the same kind; one of this number is the 37 II, 6 | activity in it is sufficient in kind and in quantity to correspond 38 II, 6 | or anything else of the kind, we cannot raise the eyelids 39 II, 7 | is there anything of the kind, nor is it possible for 40 II, 7 | between animals of the same kind. However, those also unite 41 II, 7 | horses and sheep. But this kind, of mules, is universally 42 II, 8 | but the whole of the mule kind is sterile. The reason has 43 II, 8 | from parents of the same kind. But we find that though 44 II, 8 | in the animal of its own kind. Then, again, the argument 45 II, 8 | from mules. For (1) another kind cannot be, because the product 46 II, 8 | them, if mated with its own kind, bears only one young one; 47 III, 1 | nutriment to make seed, their kind being prolific. And some 48 III, 1 | reason is that the fish kind is very fertile; now it 49 III, 1 | moister (such is the fish kind) we find the white not separated 50 III, 1 | bladder or something of the kind and boil them over a fire 51 III, 2 | work, for concoction is a kind of heat. For the earth aids 52 III, 5 | copulate (unless in any kind the distinction of sex does 53 III, 6 | jackdaws. Birds of the pigeon kind do the same, but, because 54 III, 7 | previously impregnated by one kind of cock change their nature 55 III, 7 | if indeed there is any kind of fish of such a nature 56 III, 9 | and have nothing of the kind. For an egg is also of such 57 III, 10| former, then either (1) each kind must generate its own kind, 58 III, 10| kind must generate its own kind, or (2) some one kind must 59 III, 10| own kind, or (2) some one kind must generate the others, 60 III, 10| generate the others, or (3) one kind must unite with another 61 III, 10| case generate their own kind, but as it is their brood 62 III, 10| generate both their own kind and the bees.~As bees are 63 III, 10| peculiar and extraordinary kind of animal so also their 64 III, 10| should not be of the same kind is peculiar to them, for 65 III, 10| similar creatures, but from a kind different indeed but akin 66 III, 10| overlapping unless the same kind is always to be produced 67 III, 10| it must be from their own kind. The grubs of the kings 68 III, 10| leaders generate their own kind but also another kind, that 69 III, 10| own kind but also another kind, that of the bees; the bees 70 III, 10| bees again generate another kind, the drones, but do not 71 III, 10| also generate their own kind, but this has been denied 72 III, 10| even to generate another kind than themselves. This is 73 III, 10| afterwards a few of their own kind; thus the brood of the latter 74 III, 10| differences of each of these kind from one another and from 75 III, 11| in another from their own kind, or some of them in the 76 III, 11| or smoke or earth. Such a kind of animal must be sought 77 III, 11| a new animal of the same kind should come into being from 78 III, 11| more or less honourable in kind depends on the embracing 79 III, 11| from a concretion of this kind, the earthy matter hardening 80 III, 11| even some sanguinea, as a kind of mullet and some other 81 III, 11| fishes and also the eel kind. For all of these, though 82 III, 11| previously nothing of the kind existed, the so-called limnostrea, 83 III, 11| so-called limnostrea, a kind of oyster, have come into 84 IV, 1 | is still imperfect in its kind the distinction is already 85 IV, 1 | receptacle of blood of some kind, still the system of the 86 IV, 1 | within itself of such a kind as to set up movements also 87 IV, 2 | body are of such or such a kind because of the tempering 88 IV, 3 | human being but only some kind of animal, what is called 89 IV, 3 | for monstrosity is also a kind of deficiency.~ 90 IV, 4 | in a line.~Nothing of the kind occurs with bees and wasps, 91 IV, 4 | Nature, not any and every kind of Nature, but Nature in 92 IV, 4 | great confusion of every kind has been found. Those deficiency 93 IV, 4 | born, not the fact that the kind of animal has one, two, 94 IV, 4 | are also of the following kind, when the monstrosity affects 95 IV, 4 | heart is a part of such a kind then that which has one 96 IV, 5 | within them, so that, if any kind of such birds has much semen 97 IV, 5 | impregnations, if their kind is spermatic, if their body 98 IV, 8 | have experience of each kind of animal, but is most remarkable 99 IV, 8 | position of the mammae in each kind of animals for both causes; 100 IV, 8 | opposite things, and pus is a kind of putrefaction but milk 101 IV, 10| elephant, and yet the human kind is smaller than that of 102 IV, 10| the world, both of each kind separately and of all in 103 V, 1 | characterize the whole of a kind of animals sometimes, while 104 V, 1 | characteristic of each separate kind, then none of these things 105 V, 1 | be characteristic of the kind of animal. In fact in some 106 V, 1 | the animal is of such a kind), but it will have an eye 107 V, 1 | have an eye of a particular kind of necessity in another 108 V, 1 | only one colour for each kind of animal; e.g. cattle are 109 V, 1 | of others again the whole kind is blue or grey-eyed, and 110 V, 1 | morbid affections of each kind of sight. Cataract attacks 111 V, 3 | must be considered as a kind of hair, as in the land 112 V, 3 | necessary causes each particular kind of hair occurs. The principal 113 V, 6 | term those of which the kind as a whole has one colour, 114 V, 6 | ways; sometimes the whole kind is vari-coloured, as leopards 115 V, 6 | thrattai"; sometimes the kind as a whole is not so, but 116 V, 6 | another individual of the same kind (as dark changing into white 117 V, 6 | natural characteristic of the kind as a whole not to have one 118 V, 6 | have one colour only, the kind being easily moved in both 119 V, 6 | is whole-coloured but the kind many-coloured. This is owing