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Alphabetical    [«  »]
commencement 2
commences 1
comminute 1
common 31
communicate 1
communion 1
compact 2
Frequency    [«  »]
32 itself
32 large
32 very
31 common
31 kind
31 serve
30 hotter
Aristotle
On the Parts of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

common

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | attributes which they have in common in virtue of some common 2 I, 1 | common in virtue of some common element of their nature, 3 I, 1 | are first to deal with the common or generic characters, and 4 I, 3 | present in their essence a common undifferentiated element, 5 I, 3 | element, but any apparently common element must really be differentiated. ( 6 I, 3 | it were, there would be a common undifferentiated element 7 I, 3 | and if no differentia be common to several groups, the number 8 I, 3 | not divisible could yet be common to several groups, then 9 I, 3 | plain that in virtue of that common differentia specifically 10 I, 3 | that none of them shall be common; for otherwise, as already 11 I, 3 | divided by the functions common to body and soul, by Flying, 12 I, 4 | have certain attributes in common. However, the present nomenclature 13 I, 4 | individuals possess one common specific form, it will suffice 14 I, 4 | that is, the attributes common to all its individuals, 15 I, 4 | as the same attribute is common to many species, and so 16 I, 4 | of the groups that have a common nature and contain closely 17 I, 4 | not popularly known by a common appellation, but withal 18 I, 5 | to state the attributes common to whole groups of animals, 19 I, 5 | already noticed, present common attributes, that is to say, 20 I, 5 | office. To treat of the common attributes in connexion 21 I, 5 | iteration. For many groups have common attributes. So much for 22 I, 5 | then, first to describe the common functions, common, that 23 I, 5 | describe the common functions, common, that is, to the whole animal 24 I, 5 | describe the attributes common to all animals, or to assemblages, 25 I, 5 | groups. In the first case the common attributes may be called 26 II, 13| are sharpsighted; while common fowls and the like, that 27 II, 16| office, contributing in common with other parts to man’ 28 III, 1 | uses the parts which are common to all animals for many 29 III, 3 | must be some sort of tube common to the two divisions of 30 III, 4 | one may serve as a centre common to both sides. But this 31 III, 5 | the blood-vessels have one common starting-point.~The vessels,


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