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Alphabetical    [«  »]
and 312
angle 2
angles 2
animal 22
animals 44
ankle 2
another 16
Frequency    [«  »]
23 only
23 quadrupeds
23 superior
22 animal
22 both
22 feet
22 now
Aristotle
On the Gait of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

animal

   Paragraph
1 1 | points of motion necessary to animal progression, the second 2 3 | movement upon it. For an animal which jumps makes its jump 3 4 | it with its roots as an animal does with its mouth.~Things 4 4 | detached more than any other animal because he is natural in 5 6 | backwards, nor has a moving animal any division whereby it 6 6 | original from which the animal’s movements of right and 7 6 | and inferior, start); each animal must have this original 8 7 | see that no Sanguineous animal can progress at more points 9 7 | What we observe in the animal world is in agreement with 10 7 | account. For no Sanguineous animal if it be divided into more 11 8 | necessarily be.~But every limbed animal has necessarily an even 12 8 | otherwise progress at all every animal which has limbs must have 13 8 | others be moved, and the animal must act in each of these 14 9 | there were any kneeless animal which walked, at some other 15 11| these questions. But why an animal that is to stand erect must 16 11| And so man, the only erect animal, has legs longer and stouter 17 11| his body than any other animal with legs. What we observe 18 12| and hips no Sanguineous animal with feet could progress, 19 12| at the same time for the animal to go forward, if the leading 20 14| together and first, the animal would be wrenched, and the 21 14| progress. For in direction this animal has a movement all its own; 22 14| its own; it is the only animal that moves not forwards,


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