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Alphabetical [« »] waste-products 3 wasting 1 watches 2 water 64 water-plants 1 waters 6 watery 8 | Frequency [« »] 65 later 64 before 64 certain 64 water 63 less 63 made 63 perfect | Aristotle On the Generation of Animals IntraText - Concordances water |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 18| of mixing, as wine when water is poured into it. For in 2 II, 2 | cooling it becomes liquid as water, and its colour is that 3 II, 2 | and its colour is that of water. This would appear strange, 4 II, 2 | would appear strange, for water is not thickened by heat; 5 II, 2 | the whole of it goes like water.~This then is the difficulty. 6 II, 2 | the difficulty. If it is water, water evidently does not 7 II, 2 | difficulty. If it is water, water evidently does not thicken 8 II, 2 | or a mixture of earth and water, it ought not to liquefy 9 II, 2 | liquefy entirely and turn to water.~Perhaps, however, we have 10 II, 2 | the liquids composed of water and earthy matter that thicken, 11 II, 2 | but also those composed of water and air; foam, for instance, 12 II, 2 | oxide of lead is mixed with water or even with oil, the mass 13 II, 2 | for snow is foam). And water itself on mingling with 14 II, 2 | of air, not of earth or water). This too is why it floats 15 II, 2 | floats on the surface of the water, for the air contained in 16 II, 2 | liquid and dark; for the water, and any small quantity 17 II, 2 | compound of spirit (pneuma) and water, and the former is hot air ( 18 II, 2 | nature because it is made of water. What Ctesias the Cnidian 19 II, 2 | which is what happens when water and oil are mixed and shaken 20 II, 4 | been washed out with hot water, their mouth being turned 21 II, 4 | being turned downwards, draw water into themselves. And this 22 II, 6 | each of the parts, like water in unbaked pottery, and 23 II, 7 | that because of the want of water all meet at the few places 24 II, 7 | semen of men is tested in water to find out if it is infertile, 25 II, 8 | in the case of wine and water? This saying is quite beyond 26 II, 8 | hollows" of the wine and water is too far beyond our perception. 27 III, 2 | the bird be drenched with water or suddenly chilled in any 28 III, 9 | other such materials and in water. For all of them after the 29 III, 11| quickening power than solid, water than earth, so much does 30 III, 11| be in such a relation to water as plants are to earth, 31 III, 11| also the testacea in the water vary more in form than those 32 III, 11| inhabitants of the sea, for fresh water, though sweet and nutritious, 33 III, 11| now the sea is not only water but much more material than 34 III, 11| more material than fresh water and hot in its nature; it 35 III, 11| the parts of the universe, water and air and earth, so that 36 III, 11| the aquatic animals to water, the land animals to air, 37 III, 11| way, whether in earth or water, manifestly come into being 38 III, 11| liquid because there is water in earth, and air in water, 39 III, 11| water in earth, and air in water, and in all air is vital 40 III, 11| again of some is earth and water, of others the more complicated 41 III, 11| turned muddy through want of water; thus when a naval armament 42 IV, 2 | these respects, and one water from another, for the same 43 IV, 2 | the body, especially the water; for men consume more of 44 IV, 4 | does not continue to make water hotter in proportion as 45 IV, 4 | limit to the heat of which water is capable; if that is once 46 IV, 4 | fire is then increased, the water no longer gets hotter but 47 IV, 4 | eddies do in rivers; as the water in these is carried along 48 IV, 10| the sea and all bodies of water settling and changing according 49 V, 1 | while the dark have more water than fire in them, and that 50 V, 1 | owing to deficiency of water in their composition, and 51 V, 1 | sight to be connected with water, not fire, in all cases. 52 V, 1 | sense organ is composed of water and if we were right in 53 V, 1 | reason it is composed of water and not of air or fire—then 54 V, 1 | then we must assume the water to be the cause of the colours 55 V, 1 | watery, and the unfathomable water is dark or deep-blue on 56 V, 2 | its life is passed in the water; now the ear is a part added 57 V, 2 | result by receiving a mass of water into itself.~We have thus 58 V, 4 | And as there is a decay of water, of earth, and all such 59 V, 5 | with a mixture of oil and water. For, though water cools 60 V, 5 | oil and water. For, though water cools things, the oil mingled 61 V, 5 | hair from drying quickly, water being easily dried up. ( 62 V, 6 | many-coloured. This is owing to the water which they drink, for hot 63 V, 6 | the hot have more air than water in them, and the air shining 64 V, 8 | we should think that the water has been drawn off from