Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
vertebrae 3
very 32
vessel 18
vessels 39
vicious 1
victim 1
view 3
Frequency    [«  »]
39 cold
39 front
39 single
39 vessels
38 fishes
38 mouth
38 natural
Aristotle
On the Parts of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

vessels

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 5 | frame-blood, flesh, bones, vessels, and the like-without much 2 II, 1 | the stream of blood in the vessels. And as to the heart, the 3 II, 1 | very starting-point of the vessels, and the actual seat of 4 II, 3 | third receptacle, namely the vessels, which serve as such for 5 II, 3 | that is in the heart and vessels. The manner in which the 6 II, 7 | heat, these encompassing vessels, instead of being few and 7 II, 15| small blood-vessels. For the vessels come to an end where the 8 III, 4 | This primary source of the vessels is the heart. For the vessels 9 III, 4 | vessels is the heart. For the vessels manifestly issue from it 10 III, 4 | are some who say that the vessels commence in the head. In 11 III, 4 | be many sources for the vessels, and these scattered; and 12 III, 4 | Again, as already said, the vessels continue their course through 13 III, 4 | the heart is a part of the vessels and their origin; and for 14 III, 4 | of blood, as though the vessels took thence their origin. 15 III, 4 | always contained within vessels. Nor is this but consistent 16 III, 4 | blood is conveyed into the vessels from the heart, but none 17 III, 4 | from the heart that all the vessels take their rise. Since then 18 III, 4 | which is the origin of other vessels; inasmuch, moreover, as 19 III, 4 | moreover, as these two vessels present differences, hereafter 20 III, 4 | spacious the cavities and vessels are, the greater the amount 21 III, 4 | blood-vessels, is ever fat, the vessels being indistinct and the 22 III, 5 | heart; and all the other vessels are but offshoots from them. 23 III, 5 | from them. Now that these vessels exist on account of the 24 III, 5 | the case of the blood the vessels are that receptacle. Let 25 III, 5 | us now explain why these vessels are two, and why they spring 26 III, 5 | reason, then, why these two vessels coalesce into one centre, 27 III, 5 | common starting-point.~The vessels, again, are two, because 28 III, 5 | Lastly, the reason for the vessels being distributed throughout 29 III, 5 | nothing left of them but their vessels. The explanation of this 30 III, 5 | potentially they are no whit less vessels than before. This too explains 31 III, 5 | there be a blood-vessel. The vessels then are there, but are 32 III, 5 | the mouths of the small vessels are dilated. Instances, 33 III, 5 | to the heat in the small vessels having been too scanty for 34 III, 5 | of the body, between the vessels that have issued from the 35 III, 5 | relations of the different vessels must be looked for in the 36 III, 7 | as a bond, by which these vessels, while floating freely, 37 III, 7 | connexion with the body. For the vessels give off branches which 38 III, 10| inner terminations of the vessels that they are developed; 39 III, 13| exist for the sake of the vessels, the latter cannot exist


IntraText® (V89) Copyright 1996-2007 EuloTech SRL