The eight sections of Hippocrates Aphorismes review'd and rendred into English, according to the translation of Anutius Foesius ; digested into an exact and methodical form and divided into several convenient distinctions, and every distinction into several chapters, wherein every aphorisme is reduced to its proper subject, whereby the reader may find out any desired aphorisme without the tedious revolution of the whole work ; wherein also many aphorismes are significantly interpreted which were neglected in the former translation.

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Title
The eight sections of Hippocrates Aphorismes review'd and rendred into English, according to the translation of Anutius Foesius ; digested into an exact and methodical form and divided into several convenient distinctions, and every distinction into several chapters, wherein every aphorisme is reduced to its proper subject, whereby the reader may find out any desired aphorisme without the tedious revolution of the whole work ; wherein also many aphorismes are significantly interpreted which were neglected in the former translation.
Author
Hippocrates.
Publication
London :: Printed by W.G. for Rob. Crofts ...,
1665.
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Subject terms
Hippocrates.
Medicine -- Aphorisms.
Medicine, Greek and Roman.
Cite this Item
"The eight sections of Hippocrates Aphorismes review'd and rendred into English, according to the translation of Anutius Foesius ; digested into an exact and methodical form and divided into several convenient distinctions, and every distinction into several chapters, wherein every aphorisme is reduced to its proper subject, whereby the reader may find out any desired aphorisme without the tedious revolution of the whole work ; wherein also many aphorismes are significantly interpreted which were neglected in the former translation." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A43860.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed April 30, 2024.

Pages

CHAP. XVII. Of the Affects of the Teeth.

Sect. 3. Aph. 25.

BUt when they are come to breeding of their Teeth, Pricking, Itchings of the Gums, Fea∣vers, Convulsions, Fluxes of the belly, and then chiefly when they begin to breed their Dog Teeth, and to those who are of a grosse constitu∣tion, and who are costive.

Page 102

Sect. 4. Aph. 53.

Those Feavers are most vehement, whereby a clammy gluttinous humour doth grow to the Teeth.

Sect. 5. Aph. 18.

Cold things are offensive to the bones, teeth, nerves, brain, and marrow of the back-bone, but hot things are profitable.

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