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Alphabetical [« »] matured 2 maturing 1 maturity 2 may 83 mean 35 meaning 2 means 20 | Frequency [« »] 84 man 84 up 83 either 83 may 83 two 82 size 81 form | Aristotle On the Generation of Animals IntraText - Concordances may |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | essence (and these two we may regard pretty much as one 2 I, 2 | male and female principles may be put down first and foremost 3 I, 4 | of most animals is, you may say, nothing else than to 4 I, 8 | produced. In order that these may be preserved they must have 5 I, 17| and every part of the body may be reduced to four. First, 6 I, 18| one part, and another part may be removed, and a third 7 I, 18| in the parent plant.~We may also ask whether the semen 8 I, 18| uterus, the same account may be given of the others.~ 9 I, 18| comfortable), and so it may be also when other secretions 10 I, 19| this subject, then, so much may be laid down. But since 11 I, 19| confirmation of this view may be drawn from some of the 12 I, 20| distinguished, in these many animals may come from one emission of 13 I, 22| constantly be added that it may increase in size. Therefore 14 I, 22| these considerations we may also gather how it is that 15 II, 1 | taking a general view, we may say that sanguinea are of 16 II, 1 | hard integument that it may be preserved by the protection 17 II, 1 | function. While, then, we may allow that hardness and 18 II, 1 | that have life and soul, may be caused by mere heat and 19 II, 1 | products of art; heat and cold may make the iron soft and hard, 20 II, 1 | thing existing potentially may be nearer or further from 21 II, 2 | quantity of earthy matter there may be, remain in semen as it 22 II, 3 | the animal nature there may be, this also has still 23 II, 4 | generation, that another creature may come into being of the same 24 II, 4 | to dwell in it, not only may the question be asked at 25 II, 4 | is to do so, but also we may object that, when each of 26 II, 4 | the parts of the embryo may be moulded in conformity 27 II, 4 | matrix.~Here a difficulty may be raised. If the blood 28 II, 5 | 5~And yet the question may be raised why it is that, 29 II, 5 | it is possible that this may generate a young one from 30 II, 6 | thickened by boiling that they may be more palatable or for 31 II, 6 | everywhere the nutriment may be divided into two kinds, 32 II, 6 | About the teeth a difficulty may be raised. They have actually 33 II, 7 | puberty; the same thing may befall others as their years 34 II, 8 | others; that which is empty may seem to be something, but 35 II, 8 | order that the ass-foals may be born in a warm season, 36 II, 8 | birth.~The male, again, may sometimes generate, both 37 II, 8 | injured in the uterus; this may happen to any pig. The origin 38 III, 1 | animals that walk, and all may be embraced in the same 39 III, 1 | cause of the double colour may be seen from considering 40 III, 2 | of the seed.~A difficulty may be raised about the growth 41 III, 3 | is perfect.~The question may be asked why the development 42 III, 4 | growing quickly that the race may not perish, as it would 43 III, 7 | generation of fish, the question may be raised, why it is that 44 III, 9 | these and many of the others may be thought to resemble eggs 45 III, 9 | is quite natural, which may wondered at by many. Caterpillars 46 III, 10| without copulation, this may well happen also with bees, 47 III, 10| for instance (1) that bees may be generated from the union 48 III, 10| 2) that all the others may be generated from one, as 49 III, 10| copulation is a thing which may be paralleled in other animals, 50 III, 11| plants has but few and one may say practically no representatives 51 III, 11| of these elements. Plants may be assigned to land, the 52 III, 11| of the union or not.~It may be asked, if we wish to 53 IV, 1 | male or female, as the case may be, even before the distinction 54 IV, 1 | form along with it. This may be seen in the case of eunuchs, 55 IV, 3 | the mother, whoever she may be, are individuals.~The 56 IV, 3 | some similarity, such as may arise even where there is 57 IV, 4 | happen in a certain way but may also happen in another way. 58 IV, 4 | the semen.~A difficulty may be raised concerning (1) 59 IV, 4 | the other parts, for they may be multiplied or they may 60 IV, 4 | may be multiplied or they may be absent. Again, they may 61 IV, 4 | may be absent. Again, they may have the generative parts 62 IV, 4 | Therefore many small ones may be produced together, but 63 IV, 4 | difficulty now stated we may rather be surprised with 64 IV, 4 | of the uterus, and they may be seen lying in a row in 65 IV, 4 | and heat of his body he may produce many [for semen 66 IV, 4 | than the rest. The reason may be gathered from what has 67 IV, 4 | The cause why the parts may be multiplied contrary to 68 IV, 4 | the embryo is cleft there may come into being more than 69 IV, 4 | kidneys. Further, the parts may migrate, the movements which 70 IV, 4 | that some of their passages may have grown together or others 71 IV, 4 | grown together or others may have been diverted from 72 IV, 7 | Moreover this condition may continue till old age and 73 IV, 8 | after birth, so that it may neither fail at this time 74 IV, 8 | animals which move about may contain within themselves 75 IV, 8 | cause of concoction, we may take that already given, 76 IV, 8 | that already given, or we may take the opposite, for it 77 IV, 8 | generally are but where they may so happen, still what is 78 IV, 10| they be animals or, one may say, anything else whatever. 79 IV, 10| of the sun and moon, they may perhaps depend on other 80 V, 1 | movement coming from without may pass straight through it, 81 V, 1 | through it, even that it may not cast a shade the liquid 82 V, 2 | a distance, man is, one may say, the worst of all animals 83 V, 4 | change also. Indeed, we may rightly call disease an