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Alphabetical    [«  »]
bone 23
bone-like 2
bonelike 1
bones 45
bony 1
book 4
bore 2
Frequency    [«  »]
46 lung
46 say
46 without
45 bones
45 matter
44 both
44 just
Aristotle
On the Parts of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

bones

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 5 | human frame-blood, flesh, bones, vessels, and the like-without 2 II, 1 | body are compounded out of bones, sinews, flesh, and the 3 II, 2 | organ is constructed of bones, sinews, flesh, and the 4 II, 6 | embryo the marrow of the bones has a blood-like appearance, 5 II, 6 | marrow. These are those whose bones are strong and solid, as 6 II, 6 | utterly insignificant that the bones look as though they had 7 II, 6 | that animals shall have bones or something analogous to 8 II, 6 | necessity that some of these bones shall contain marrow; for 9 II, 6 | substance contained within the bones is the nutriment out of 10 II, 6 | have strong and compact bones, some of these should be 11 II, 6 | is spent in forming the bones.~Those animals that have 12 II, 6 | fish-spines in place of bones have no other marrow than 13 II, 6 | different from that of other bones. For, having to act the 14 II, 6 | nutriment apportioned to the bones and fish-spines, which has 15 II, 8 | the other parts I mean the bones, the skin, the sinews, and 16 II, 8 | like character. Thus the bones are a contrivance to give 17 II, 8 | in animals that have no bones the same office is fulfilled 18 II, 8 | corresponding to the spinous bones of fishes. For instance, 19 II, 8 | sanguineous animals their bones or their fish-spines, as 20 II, 9 | nature may use adjoining bones either as though they were 21 II, 9 | office for the sake of which bones exist; for, were it discontinuous 22 II, 9 | centre or origin of the bones, in all animals that have 23 II, 9 | in all animals that have bones, is what is called the chine. 24 II, 9 | With this all the other bones of the body are in continuity; 25 II, 9 | from this chine that the bones of the limbs, in such animals 26 II, 9 | shape. In these cases the bones are bound together by sinews, 27 II, 9 | each other.~Round about the bones, and attached to them by 28 II, 9 | for the sake of which the bones themselves exist. For just 29 II, 9 | exception, supported by bones, which serve, when the parts 30 II, 9 | in all animals devoid of bones; in order that there may 31 II, 9 | is lodged here.~Now the bones of viviparous animals, of 32 II, 9 | rapine. Thus it is that the bones of males are harder than 33 II, 9 | those of females; and the bones of flesh-eaters, that get 34 II, 9 | example; for so hard are its bones, that, when struck, they 35 II, 9 | viviparous, is provided with bones and not with fish-spines.~ 36 II, 9 | that are oviparous, the bones present successive slight 37 II, 9 | Thus in Birds there are bones, but these are not so strong 38 II, 9 | are not so strong as the bones of the Vivipara. Then come 39 II, 9 | In the Serpents too the bones have the character of fish-spine, 40 II, 9 | viviparous animals many of the bones are cartilaginous. This 41 II, 9 | For the marrow, which in bones is distinctly separate, 42 II, 9 | Very nearly resembling the bones to the touch are such parts 43 II, 15| over the junction of two bones, which is the reason that 44 III, 2 | has a solid piece from the bones fitted into its cavity. 45 III, 4 | as a support; just as the bones serve as supports for the


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