Page:O. F. Owen's Organon of Aristotle Vol. 1 (1853).djvu/71

 expresses any thing by his voice whether he is interrogated by any one or not, but that he speaks from deliberate intention. Now of these enunciations one is simple, for instance something of something, or from something, but another is composed of these, as a certain sentence which is already a composite; simple enunciation, then, is voice significant about something being inherent, or non-inherent, according as times are divided.

Chapter 6
is the enunciation of something concerning something, but negation is the enunciation of something from something. Since,