Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
heel 4
heeled 2
heels 1
height 27
heightened 3
heights 6
held 24
Frequency    [«  »]
27 free
27 heart
27 heat
27 height
27 hold
27 life
27 north-west
Jules Verne
The Fur country

IntraText - Concordances

height

   Part,  Chapter
1 I, VIII | These trees, which attain a height of some forty feet, supply 2 I, VIII | regular clumps of equal height, sloping down to the very 3 I, VIII | foot of a cliff of moderate height. Mrs Barnett and the Lieutenant 4 I, IX | rebounded to an immense height.~“Help! help!” cried old 5 I, XI | moderate, maintaining a mean height of 59° Fahrenheit above 6 I, XII | icebergs of a considerable height shut out the view. The water 7 I, XII | had reached its maximum height above the horizon; and consequently 8 I, XIII | icebergs of a considerable height. partly draped in mist; 9 I, XIII | be kept at the same mean height. Snow is, in fact, a very 10 I, XIV | poplar which grows to a great height and shoots forth yellowish 11 I, XVII | generally at their greatest height; we have high water or flood, 12 I, XVII | every animal of a moderate height, a fox or a marten, for 13 I, XX | shot up to a considerable height, lighting up the whole country 14 II, II | Hobson and Black took the height of the sun above the horizon 15 II, V | thermometer maintained a mean height of 59° Fahrenheit, and during 16 II, VI | hurricane was not yet at its height, and that it would probably 17 II, X | temperature maintaining a mean height of 49° Fahrenheit, some 18 II, X | enough to affect the mean height of the thermometer, on the 19 II, XII | object. Icebergs of moderate height assumed gigantic proportions, 20 II, XIII | thermometer maintained a mean height of more than 34° Fahrenheit. 21 II, XIV | which were piled up to a height of some three or four hundred 22 II, XIV | up on the ground to the height of two feet.~On the 27th 23 II, XV | conspicuous object, owing to the height of Cape Michael crowned 24 II, XVIII| rolled blocks of ice to a height of fifty or sixty feet. 25 II, XVIII| really of quite so great a height as before, and it was determined 26 II, XXIII| mainland. Even now its mean height was five or six feet above 27 II, XXIII| reduced, and, alas! its mean height above the sea level had


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