Book, Paragraph
1 I, 7 | natural order of inquiry if we speak first of common characteristics,
2 I, 7 | namely "unmusical man".~We speak of "becoming that from this"
3 I, 7 | even of what survives; we speak of "a statue coming to be
4 I, 9 | perishable, forms we shall speak in the expositions which
5 II, 1 | is born from man.~We also speak of a thing’s nature as being
6 II, 4 | chance), nevertheless they speak of some of these things
7 III, 5 | Thus the view of those who speak after the manner of the
8 III, 6 | existence" is ambiguous. When we speak of the potential existence
9 III, 6 | in the sense in which we speak of the day or the games
10 IV, 7 | this), and in this they speak incorrectly; for the matter
11 IV, 13| and in how many senses we speak of the "now", and what "
12 V, 1 | sense the extremes. Hence we speak of the intermediate as in
13 V, 4 | connexion with which we speak of motion, the "that which",
14 V, 5 | this, however, we shall speak later), but changing to
15 VII, 3 | the original name: thus we speak of the bronze or the wax
16 VII, 3 | And not only so: we also speak of the particular fluid
17 VII, 3 | would seem absurd even to speak in this way, to speak, that
18 VII, 3 | to speak in this way, to speak, that is to say, of a man
19 VII, 4 | alteration? We cannot here speak of an "equal" alteration:
20 VII, 4 | constitutes being, we may indeed speak of a "greater number" and
21 VIII, 8| and they go so far as to speak even of becoming and perishing
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