Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library |
Aristotle On the Generation of Animals IntraText - Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
Book, Paragraph
1501 III, 11| say, land-oysters, oysters water-plants.~For such a reason also 1502 III, 10| should be idle as having no weapon to fight for the food and 1503 III, 10| for Nature does not give weapons for fighting to any female, 1504 V, 8 | only smoothed in time by wearing down), partly from necessity 1505 I, 18| his father, the shoes he wears are like his father’s shoes.~ 1506 V, 7 | on to it, as women do who weave at the loom, for they stretch 1507 V, 6 | their nutriment makes them well-flavoured, and heat causes the concoction. 1508 I, 18| fat with those who are too well-nourished. For fat also is a healthy 1509 V, 7 | others, in others again well-pitched and in due proportion between 1510 V, 1 | in fact, men in pits or wells sometimes see the stars. 1511 II, 1 | some which have not, as the whale and dolphin, are internally 1512 I, 9 | aquatic animals, dolphins, whales, and such cetacea.~ 1513 I, 20| for example, one stalk of wheat from one grain, as one animal 1514 II, 5 | one after another, as the wheels are moved one by another 1515 II, 3 | it with the same movement wherewith it is moved itself. For 1516 V, 6 | vari-coloured, and the skins of the white-haired and dark-haired are white 1517 V, 5 | way the cause, for even white-skinned men have very dark hair. 1518 V, 6 | different; the latter are whitened by the natural heat, the 1519 II, 2 | wherefore that which is whitening becomes thicker, the watery 1520 | whoever 1521 IV, 3 | than the more general and wider characteristics. Coriscus 1522 II, 4 | uterus has a considerable width, whereas the males that 1523 I, 18| produced at all, as by the willow and poplar. This condition 1524 II, 3 | this reason, whenever a wind-egg is produced by any animal, 1525 V, 3 | the south, and those in windy places than those in sheltered, 1526 III, 2 | are produced; for just as wines turn sour in the heats from 1527 III, 1 | diverted to the wings and wing-feathers, while the body is small 1528 III, 9 | which are not aquatic being winged.~Another point is quite 1529 II, 8 | not wont to be produced in wintry regions because it cannot 1530 II, 6 | tempered, for man is the wisest of animals. And children 1531 II, 3 | included something divine (to wit, what is called the reason), 1532 III, 1 | they bear too much fruit, wither away after the crop when 1533 V, 5 | nothing springs up in a withered state. Many hairs also whiten 1534 II, 7 | with dogs and foxes and wolves; the Indian dogs also spring 1535 III, 9 | quite natural, which may wondered at by many. Caterpillars 1536 IV, 4 | at is the reason for not wondering; it is just because of their 1537 IV, 1 | blood, for it cannot be worked up into semen. Therefore 1538 II, 7 | some other birds. Nothing worth mentioning has been observed 1539 V, 5 | the skull of horses, and a wound is most fatal." As then 1540 V, 2 | hear less well during a yawn or expiration than during 1541 I, 11| uterus in parturition by yawning or anything of the kind, 1542 III, 4 | nature of the vital heat, in yeasts by the heat of the juice 1543 III, 4 | have in them superfluous yeasty matter), but also for the 1544 III, 1 | are called wind-eggs and "zephyria" by some; these occur in