Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] earnest 1 ears 6 earshell 1 earth 29 earthly 1 ease 5 easier 2 | Frequency [« »] 30 vast 29 arms 29 beautiful 29 earth 29 either 29 evidently 29 face | Jules Verne Twenty thousand leagues under the sea IntraText - Concordances earth |
Part, Chapter
1 1, 9 | it belonged no longer to earth: this silence was dreadful. ~ 2 1, 10| renounced the food of the earth, and I am never ill now. 3 1, 10| ties which bind me to the earth. But I had done with the 4 1, 13| by all the rivers of the earth in forty thousand years. ~ 5 1, 13| continents, till at length the earth became geographically arranged, 6 1, 15| ear is unaccustomed on the earth; indeed, water is a better 7 1, 15| one. At this period the earth sloped downwards; the light 8 1, 16| Island of Crespo. It was the earth! Captain Nemo stopped suddenly. 9 1, 18| he replied coldly: ~"The earth does not want new continents, 10 1, 18| and 164° 32' E. long. The earth seemed covered with verdure 11 2, 1 | misunderstood genius who, tired of earth's deceptions, had taken 12 2, 3 | The Captain fell to the earth, upset by the enormous mass 13 2, 3 | canoe of the Nautilus to the earth. ~Once on board, we each, 14 2, 7 | Well, my friend, this earth will one day be that cold 15 2, 8 | the great circle of the earth. Where were we going now, 16 2, 8 | oppressed races on this earth, miserable creatures to 17 2, 9 | unknown to the savants of the earth? Or even (for this thought 18 2, 9 | of the miseries of this earth, had sought and found independence 19 2, 10| great convulsion of the earth. Whilst you were sleeping, 20 2, 10| ask from the mines of the earth. When I burn this combustible 21 2, 10| our submarine tour of the earth. So I shall content myself 22 2, 12| have broken every tie upon earth." ~"Perhaps so," said Conseil; " 23 2, 13| fallen city thrown to the earth, as it were, by some convulsion 24 2, 13| The frozen poles of the earth do not coincide, either 25 2, 14| seals, some stretched on the earth, some on flakes of ice, 26 2, 14| There, I can aver that earth and ice were lost to sight 27 2, 14| admirably. In resting on the earth they take the most graceful 28 2, 20| God in the highest, and on earth peace, goodwill towards 29 2, 22| of any inhabitant of the earth, thrown across the cataract