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Alphabetical    [«  »]
low 1
lower 34
lowest 1
lung 46
lungs 2
lying 1
made 49
Frequency    [«  »]
49 yet
47 substance
46 already
46 lung
46 say
46 without
45 bones
Aristotle
On the Parts of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

lung

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 5 | have lungs, others have no lung, but an organ analogous 2 I, 5 | an organ analogous to a lung in its place; some have 3 II, 7 | of the heart and of the lung is hotter and richer in 4 II, 16| other animal that has a lung, and is lengthened out and 5 III, 3 | is that, when there is no lung, there is also no neck. 6 III, 3 | impossible in the case of the lung. For there must be some 7 III, 3 | the two divisions of the lung, by which—it being bipartite— 8 III, 3 | passage leading from the lung to the stomach, such as 9 III, 3 | in such of them as have a lung; nor in all of these, but 10 III, 3 | and surrounding it is the lung. Now inspiration, which 11 III, 3 | occurs for the sake of the lung and for the sake of the 12 III, 3 | oesophagus. For they lead to the lung and heart, whereas the oesophagus 13 III, 4 | also are the liver, the lung, and more than all the spleen. 14 III, 4 | being the portion of the lung which is close to the windpipe, 15 III, 4 | in these parts that the lung and liver are most closely 16 III, 6 | 6~The lung, then, is an organ found 17 III, 6 | Fishes therefore never have a lung, but have gills in its place, 18 III, 6 | are all provided with a lung.~All land animals breathe, 19 III, 6 | organ of respiration is the lung. This derives its motion 20 III, 6 | the breath. For when the lung rises up the breath streams 21 III, 6 | again expelled when the lung collapses. It has been said 22 III, 6 | It has been said that the lung exists as a provision to 23 III, 6 | Moreover, in most animals the lung is separated from the heart 24 III, 6 | mitigate any jumping.~The lung differs much in different 25 III, 6 | like, have this kind of lung; and, among inhabitants 26 III, 6 | birds. For in all these the lung is spongy, and like foam. 27 III, 6 | the very motion of the lung, airlike and void, suffices 28 III, 6 | as are the ovipara.~The lung, then, exists for respiration; 29 III, 6 | all animals that have a lung; no designation, that is, 30 III, 6 | Yet the possession of a lung is a part of their essence, 31 III, 7 | single, as the heart and lung; others to be double, as 32 III, 7 | heart with its cavities. The lung again in Ovipara is divided 33 III, 7 | invariably a third, namely the lung. The spleen, on the other 34 III, 7 | like a kidney. For their lung is spongy, and they drink 35 III, 7 | have a bladder, and whose lung contains blood, the spleen 36 III, 8 | nature to have one, whose lung contains blood. To such 37 III, 8 | superabundance in their lung of its natural constituents 38 III, 8 | pass that all animals whose lung contains blood are provided 39 III, 8 | hand, that are without a lung of this character, and that 40 III, 8 | sparingly owing to their lung being of a spongy texture, 41 III, 8 | in the sea-tortoises the lung is flesh-like and contains 42 III, 8 | contains blood, resembling the lung of the ox, and that in the 43 III, 9 | animals, however, whose lung contains blood are, as before 44 III, 10| dealt with the heart and the lung, as also with the liver, 45 III, 10| divides off the heart and lung, and, as already said, is 46 III, 10| longer derived from the lung. Moreover, among the Barbarians,


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