Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
broad-chested 1
broiling 1
broke 37
broken 52
brother-in-law 4
brothers 1
brothers-in-law 1
Frequency    [«  »]
53 sand
53 went
52 across
52 broken
52 called
52 going
52 kind
Jules Verne
The Fur country

IntraText - Concordances

broken

   Part,  Chapter
1 I, VII | fearful fury. Pieces of ice, broken off by the hurricane, were 2 I, VII | beneath the ruins of the broken masses. The blocks of ice 3 I, VIII | with its irregular shores broken by jagged capes and intersected 4 I, XI | which stretched the jagged broken coast with its pointed capes 5 I, XIII | quantities of bivalve shells broken by the surf, and with seaweed 6 I, XIII | without a morsel of silica or broken granite; and the cape itself 7 I, XV | Here the coast line was broken and fretted, showing manifest 8 I, XVII | coast, presenting a surface broken and distorted by the action 9 I, XVII | endless chain of ice-bergs, broken into countless rugged forms, 10 I, XVII | These mighty icebergs, broken into fantastic and picturesque 11 I, XXI | so hard that it had to be broken up with hatchets.~The day 12 I, XXI | places the laths became broken by their weight, and poor 13 I, XXI | walls were thrown down, broken up, crushed to pieces, and 14 I, XXI | the house; the pipes were broken, and the smoke soon became 15 I, XXII | of Cape Bathurst had been broken off, and large pieces of 16 I, XXII | appearance of the icebergs broken by collisions, undermined 17 I, XXIII| not know if my spirit be broken, or if my presentiments 18 I, XXIII| Hobson.~A sudden light had broken in upon his mind, all the 19 II, I | towards the south, where the broken isthmus was situated; but 20 II, III | abrupt angle where it had broken off, and all felt sure that 21 II, IV | edges were not jagged or broken, but clear cut, as if the 22 II, IV | which had evidently been broken off from their island. The 23 II, V | where the isthmus had been broken off; told her that the thickness 24 II, VI | Barnett, had it already been broken, had the ice-field already 25 II, VI | re-established by means of the broken isthmus; it was, therefore, 26 II, VII | which supported it was not broken in a hundred places in this 27 II, VII | the Lieutenant hear the broken words—~“Not that way!”~“ 28 II, VII | portion of our land has been broken off and drifted away, or 29 II, VII | Him!”~The two talked on in broken sentences, making each other 30 II, VIII | on the ground, some with broken stems, others torn up by 31 II, VIII | piece of the island had broken away, and a huge piece of 32 II, VIII | have flung herself upon the broken ice before it floated away, 33 II, X | together, but they were broken and separated by the motion 34 II, X | continent. Cape Bathurst has broken away from the mainland. 35 II, XII | pacing slowly along over the broken ice, bounding from one piece 36 II, XII | compelled to admit that it was broken by rents, crevasses, and 37 II, XV | distorted: strewn with hummocks, broken obelisks, shattered blocks, 38 II, XV | completely changed. Since it had broken loose from the mainland 39 II, XV | other. The ice-wall had broken up into numerous separate 40 II, XVII | and the ice-field being broken, and their continued presence 41 II, XVII | do but to wait till the broken and half-melted ice should 42 II, XVIII| way for itself between the broken ice-masses, it had fallen 43 II, XVIII| first covered must have broken the shock of the fall of 44 II, XVIII| the large blocks had to be broken up. Some of great size were 45 II, XVIII| The prisoners might have broken open one of the doors and 46 II, XVIII| said the Lieutenant in a broken voice, his eyes filling 47 II, XIX | driving it along should be broken away or dissolved, unprotected 48 II, XX | with disabled masts and a broken screw.~No one answered the 49 II, XXI | island would not now be broken up suddenly, as it must 50 II, XXII | approaching doom, which had broken down all the ordinary distinctions 51 II, XXIII| a piece of woodwork, a broken mast, or a few planks, remain 52 II, XXIII| it was not likely to be broken, it could not fail gradually


Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (V89) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2007. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License