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Alphabetical [« »] mouths 2 move 19 moved 23 movement 69 movements 19 moves 11 moving 20 | Frequency [« »] 71 without 70 most 69 cold 69 movement 69 something 67 sometimes 67 things | Aristotle On the Generation of Animals IntraText - Concordances movement |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 4 | contrived; for they make the movement of the spermatic secretion 2 I, 5 | penis being heated by its movement; it is not ready for emission 3 I, 11| bear the weight and the movement. Thirdly, parturition would 4 I, 18| whole season from a single movement). And yet how would this 5 I, 18| reason of the heat of the movement of the body in copulation, 6 I, 21| but only to the power and movement in it? For this power is 7 I, 21| and the principle of the movement comes from him. Therefore, 8 I, 21| contributes the principle of movement and the female the material. 9 I, 21| i.e. something to begin the movement in the embryo and to define 10 I, 22| workmanship and the ultimate movement imparted to matter must 11 II, 1 | the first principle of the movement, or efficient cause, whereby 12 II, 1 | semen has in itself the movement initiated by the other.)~ 13 II, 1 | made the semen, sets up the movement in the embryo and makes 14 II, 1 | what makes them is the movement set up by the male parent, 15 II, 1 | what makes a sword is the movement of the tools employed, this 16 II, 1 | the tools employed, this movement containing the principle 17 II, 1 | something else, whereas the movement of Nature exists in the 18 II, 1 | that the first principle of movement would arise.~We have thus 19 II, 3 | and is moved with the same movement as that in virtue of which 20 II, 3 | and moves it with the same movement wherewith it is moved itself. 21 II, 4 | do emit it fashion by the movement in the semen the mass forming 22 II, 4 | same formative power by the movement within themselves in that 23 II, 4 | from which comes growth and movement to the other parts. (Wherefore 24 II, 4 | truly by means of their movement, and this is the activity 25 II, 4 | tools (for in these is the movement of the soul), and each thing 26 II, 5 | when once the principle of movement has been imparted to them 27 II, 5 | stay where they are and the movement is a change of quality ( 28 II, 6 | classes, (1) the origin of the movement, (2) that which is used 29 II, 6 | secondly, the principle of movement and of generation, existing 30 II, 6 | which is the principle of movement (I say a part because this 31 II, 6 | the parts which cause the movement, being prior to the end 32 II, 6 | number is the principle of movement, and therefore in all the 33 II, 6 | seminal secretion, and the movement and activity in it is sufficient 34 II, 6 | spontaneously generated it is the movement and heat imparted by the 35 III, 1 | fire so as not to make the movement of the heat quicker than 36 IV, 3 | properly concocted, the movement imparted by the male will 37 IV, 3 | it is the semen or this movement that makes each of the parts 38 IV, 3 | for the formula of the movement is the same in either case.) 39 IV, 3 | either case.) Thus if this movement prevail, it will make the 40 IV, 3 | them; for instance, if the movement of the male parent be resolved, 41 IV, 3 | also in the female line the movement of the female parent changes 42 IV, 3 | individual father.~But if the movement coming from the male principle 43 IV, 3 | character remain but the movement coming from the individual 44 IV, 3 | its mother, but, if the movement coming from the mother also 45 IV, 3 | resolved, is resolved into the movement next allied to it—if less, 46 IV, 4 | distance because of the movement—taking place in the embryo, 47 IV, 10| changing according to the movement or rest of the winds, and 48 V, 1 | course must be sought in the movement or process of coming into 49 V, 1 | liquid to be adapted to the movement, others have too little, 50 V, 1 | transparency, but sight is the movement of this part in so far as 51 V, 1 | transparent, for the stronger movement drives out the weaker. Hence 52 V, 1 | disturbed and hinder the movement of the colours, nor too 53 V, 1 | as to cause difficulty of movement.~Not only the above-mentioned 54 V, 1 | and even, thin that the movement coming from without may 55 V, 1 | not pure nor suited to the movement coming from external objects 56 V, 1 | at a distance because the movement is not dispersed in space 57 V, 1 | that seeing is due to the movement coming from the objects; 58 V, 1 | a manner resembling the movement. Things at a distance, then, 59 V, 1 | sight to its object, for the movement from the object would not 60 V, 2 | have heard, for as was the movement which entered through the 61 V, 2 | sense-organ, such again is the movement which is caused by means 62 V, 2 | long; these also catch the movement from afar and pass it on 63 V, 2 | passages to preserve the movement of the air at a distance; 64 V, 7 | of voice depends on the movement of the air being slow and 65 V, 7 | move much air and make the movement slow, sometimes, having 66 V, 7 | command over it, make the movement swift. On the same principle 67 V, 7 | strength and so make the movement slow, or if they make it 68 V, 7 | these animals set much in movement whereas the others set but 69 V, 7 | are weak and powerless for movement. And bulls are particularly