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Alphabetical    [«  »]
look 2
lost 1
lower 3
lung 33
lungless 2
lungs 11
lying 2
Frequency    [«  »]
36 there
36 these
34 can
33 lung
33 some
32 life
32 refrigeration
Aristotle
On youth and old age, on life and death, on breathing

IntraText - Concordances

lung

   Paragraph
1 7 | have a bloodless and spongy lung, and then there is less 2 7 | frog-tribe, have a spongy lung. Also hemydes and tortoises 3 7 | immersed in water; for their lung, containing little blood, 4 7 | animals which have the lung charged with blood have 5 9 | impossibility, for, not having a lung, they have no windpipe; 6 15| its mouth, for then the lung causes a heaving motion 7 15| sanguineous and possess a lung, though that contains little 8 15| without breathing; for the lung, containing little blood 9 15| all animals that have no lung at all or have a bloodless 10 16| heart, all which have a lung admit the air and produce 11 16| out. All animals have a lung that are viviparous and 12 16| The former class have a lung charged with blood, but 13 16| reason for this is that the lung is designed for the purpose 14 17| windpipe and lying on the lung. The windpipe is situated 15 18| have no feet, yet possess a lung though admitting the sea-water. 16 18| reason for possessing a lung is that which we have now 17 18| respiration, for they have a lung. Hence they sleep with their 18 19| blood and most warmth in the lung are of greater size, and 19 19| in which the blood in the lung is purest and most plentiful 20 19| that he possesses such a lung. Hence this organ as much 21 21| those animals in which a lung is found, and especially 22 21| animals with a full-blooded lung require rapid refrigeration 23 21| animals with a full-blooded lung respire most is hence manifest; 24 22| heart is connected with the lung by means of passages, we 25 22| make use that possess a lung as well as a heart. But 26 22| their aquatic nature have no lung, possess the latter organ 27 22| animals can no longer move the lung aquatic animals their gills, 28 23| owing to lapse of time, the lung in the one class and the 29 23| diseases which harden the lung by forming tumours or waste 30 23| to the inability of the lung to move far either upwards 31 27| that possess a full-blooded lung. The numerous canal-like 32 27| canal-like ducts in the lung, into which it passes, have 33 27| alongside, so that the whole lung is thought to be full of


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