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Alphabetical    [«  »]
believed 1
belong 21
belonging 9
belongs 28
below 4
bereft 1
besides 10
Frequency    [«  »]
29 order
29 straight
28 according
28 belongs
28 circle
28 described
28 follow
Aristotle
Physics

IntraText - Concordances

belongs

   Book, Paragraph
1 II, 1 | rest in that to which it belongs primarily, in virtue of 2 II, 2 | sake of which", or the end, belongs to the same department of 3 II, 5 | cause present in himself-it belongs to the class of things that 4 II, 5 | most part, whereas chance belongs to a third type of event. 5 II, 8 | explain then (1) that Nature belongs to the class of causes which 6 III, 1 | them.~Now each of these belongs to all its subjects in either 7 III, 4 | is different from it and belongs to the class of the so-called 8 III, 4 | however, which specially belongs to the physicist is to investigate 9 III, 5 | Suppose then that infinity belongs to substance as an attribute. 10 III, 6 | of the completeness which belongs to size, and what is potentially 11 IV, 4 | the predicate either (1) belongs to it actually, in virtue 12 IV, 11| movement or something that belongs to movement. Since then 13 IV, 11| number of these horses, and belongs also elsewhere.~It is clear, 14 IV, 12| general, something which belongs to number-or that things 15 IV, 12| the sense that the one set belongs to number, the other to 16 V, 3 | it plain that continuity belongs to things that naturally 17 V, 6 | contrariety; and upward locomotion belongs naturally to fire and downward 18 VI, 3 | be the same present that belongs to each of the two times. 19 VI, 3 | is the same present that belongs to both the times, and it 20 VII, 1 | generically the same if it belongs to the same category, e.g. 21 VII, 2 | or twirled; thus carrying belongs to all the other three kinds 22 VIII, 4| accidental to what merely belongs to or contains as a part 23 VIII, 6| conclude that if a thing belongs to the class of unmoved 24 VIII, 6| things, whereas the latter belongs also to certain first principles 25 VIII, 7| locomotion is a motion that belongs to such things only when 26 VIII, 8| earlier from later always belongs only to the later so far 27 VIII, 8| the thing is concerned it belongs to the later stage of what 28 VIII, 8| except the last moment G. G belongs already to the later period,


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