Book,  chapter

 1    1,    2|       where? CONTIN—does that mean continent? CRUEL!”~“CRUEL!” interrupted
 2    1,    2|            land where? CONTIN—on a continent; on a continent, mark you,
 3    1,    2|        CONTIN—on a continent; on a continent, mark you, not an island.
 4    1,    2|           are about to land on the continent, where they will be taken
 5    1,    9|          Froward that the American continent actually terminates, for
 6    1,   10|            it touches the American continent to where it dips into the
 7    1,   10|         said, “across the American continent. Let us make a stride across
 8    1,   10|       danger whatever crossing the continent.”~“Monsieur Paganel,” asked
 9    1,   10|          flying passage across the continent, the way a good man goes
10    1,   23|     success? To leave the American continent, wouldnt it be to go away
11    1,   23|         our search on the American continent?”~No one made any reply.
12    1,   24|        aborder,’ or ‘ont aborde le continent ou ils seront,’ or, ‘sont
13    1,   24|            Glenarvan, “if the word continent can be applied to Australia,
14    1,   24|          the island the Australian Continent.”~V. IV Verne~“Then all
15    1,   24|        could now quit the American Continent without the least hesitation,
16    2,    1|         37th parallel touches this continent at Cape Bernouilli, and
17    2,    1|         French word CONTIN means a continent, irrefragably. Captain Grant
18    2,    1|            favor of the Australian continent.”~“Evidently,” replied the
19    2,    3|           had been only an immense continent, the thousandth part of
20    2,    4|         straight to the Australian continent, and its action is equally
21    2,    4|             and both points of the continent crossed by the 37th parallel,
22    2,    4|       Grant reached the Australian continent after his shipwreck?”~“No,
23    2,    4|         has a right to be called a continent?”~“I do, certainly.”~“I
24    2,    4|            very little of it. This continent is not much better known
25    2,    4|      existence of a great southern continent. In the library of your
26    2,    5|        which washed the Australian continent, and in four days might
27    2,    6|           into the interior of the continent.~But if so, what becomes
28    2,    6|           the western coast of the continent.~However, as Glenarvan justly
29    2,    6|           he is on this Australian continent.”~
30    2,    7|            he is on the Australian continent.’”~“And, indeed, he cannot
31    2,    7|            he is on the Australian continent, and it is useless looking
32    2,    7|            but on what part of the continent he was to be found, that
33    2,    7|            uninhabited part of the continent, where only a few bold travelers
34    2,    7|          in the heart of so vast a continent?”~No one replied, though
35    2,    7|             If we had to cross the continent in a lower latitude, at
36    2,    8|       unless we traverse the whole continent from coast to coast.”~“But
37    2,    8|       details about the Australian continent, which he knew perfectly.
38    2,    9|  hemisphere; but on the Australian continent it might be called June.
39    2,    9|            Think, my friends, of a continent, the margin of which, instead
40    2,   13| gold-fields deluged the Australian continent with the scum of Europe.~
41    2,   13|         The forests of the Oceanic continent do not in the least resemble
42    2,   14|           into the interior of the continent. I therefore think you have
43    2,   15|         set foot on the Australian continent, have I been once at fault?
44    2,   17|         set foot on the Australian continent!~A second time they had
45    2,   19|        search of Harry Grant. This continent, where he was not, and never
46    3,    1|            said positively that a “continent” had served as a refuge
47    3,    2|          in considering them as “a continent.” Could a modern geographer
48    3,    2|          repeated, “that must mean continent!”~And then he resumed his
49    3,    2|     southern point of the American continent. He thought he had found “
50    3,    2|          found “the Great Southern Continent.”~“But,” said Paganel to
51    3,    2|       century sailor might call a ‘continent’ would never stand for one
52    3,   16|            sea, and the Australian continent was finally out of sight.
53    3,   17|    quartermaster on the Australian continent a proof of Harry Grant’s
54    3,   18|        Grant was on the Australian continent. Without the least hesitation
55    3,   18|     McNabbs. “Does that still mean CONTINENT?”~“No; since New Zealand
56    3,   20|        certainty. CONTIN, at first CONTINENT, had gradually reached its
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