Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
seemed 34
seemingly 2
seems 5
seen 41
sees 1
seize 3
seized 2
Frequency    [«  »]
41 great
41 how
41 mountains
41 seen
40 most
40 part
40 thus
Jules Verne
Round the Moon

IntraText - Concordances

seen

   Chapter
1 Pre | disc, was plainly to be seen upon the black sky.~That 2 Pre | what Joseph T. Maston had seen, or thought he saw, could 3 I | Satellite, to whom, as may be seen, he had given significant 4 II | projectile, what would he have seen?~Nothing then. The darkness 5 II | speechless. He had never before seen anything so “American.”~ [ 6 II | stars. The heavens, thus seen, presented quite a new aspect, 7 II | thick spots, which are never seen on the lunar disc. They 8 III | Because we should have seen our continents and seas 9 III | world. I should like to have seen those poles of the earth 10 VI | see.’”~“And you would have seen,” replied Barbicane. “It 11 VI | the greater portion to be seen.”~“And why,” asked Nicholl, “ 12 VI | some scientific men have seen in the moon a comet whose 13 VIII | is so. Ah! if Raphael had seen us thus, what an ‘Assumption’ 14 X | diameter of thirty feet are seen very distinctly. So that, 15 X | the moon, which is never seen from the earth. This alteration 16 XI | AND REALITY~“Have you ever seen the moon?” asked a professor, 17 XI | the moon who have never seen it— at least through a glass 18 XII | friends, what that plain, seen from the height we are at, 19 XIII | group of animals was to be seen indicating life, even in 20 XIII | its elliptical crater, and seen from this distance, the 21 XIV | Nothing more was to be seen of that disc, formerly so 22 XIV | And which we should have seen,” added Nicholl, “if we 23 XV | Barbicane. “Have you not seen shooting stars rush through 24 XV | in eruption, unmistakably seen by these earthly savants, 25 XVII | his companions could have seen it, but immersed in the 26 XVII | distance of only fifty miles! Seen through this pure ether, 27 XVII | full moon that Tycho is seen in all its splendor. Then 28 XVIII| Other astronomers have seen in these inexplicable rays 29 XVIII| moon. After what they had seen, could the travelers solve 30 XVIII| ruins. And what have we seen? Everywhere and always the 31 XVIII| the 6th of December may be seen.~“Now,” said Nicholl, “let 32 XIX | world which they had only seen from a distance, as Moses 33 XIX | sphere nothing was to be seen. The earth was but a day 34 XIX | to the dark tint which is seen from the earth. The other 35 XX | have done, what they have seen, that above all must interest 36 XXI | projectile had just been seen in the gigantic reflector 37 XXI | projectile could not be seen, J. T. Maston maintaining 38 XXI | thousandth time that he had just seen the projectile, and adding 39 XXII | projectile was nowhere to be seen.~The impatience of these 40 XXIII| the Union without having seen Barbicane, Nicholl, and 41 XXIII| eye until then had ever seen? It was now their turn to


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