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Alphabetical    [«  »]
heartless 1
hearts 1
hearty 2
heat 41
heated 6
heaved 2
heaven 8
Frequency    [«  »]
42 many
42 perhaps
41 atmosphere
41 heat
40 collision
40 either
40 men
Jules Verne
Off on a Comet

IntraText - Concordances

heat

   Book,  Chapter
1 I, VII | the influence of internal heat, the waters rose in vapor 2 I, VIII | from the burning sun. The heat was becoming insufferable, 3 I, VIII | insufferable, surpassing the heat of Senegal and other equatorial 4 I, VIII | surprise at the unwonted heat. No remonstrances from his 5 I, VIII | that, even in the matter of heat, the tropics could in any 6 I, VIII | haymaking; and as the extreme heat precluded any prolonged 7 I, VIII | increased and increasing heat, there was another very 8 I, VIII | the amount of light and heat that it had been receiving 9 I, VIII | shedding upon it a light and a heat seven times greater than 10 I, X | gradually diminishing; the heat upon Gourbi Island is not 11 I, XV | central source of light and heat, and be absorbed in it? 12 I, XVII | then, has some internal heat,” said Servadac.~“And why 13 I, XVIII| rapidly during the excessive heat of January, when the orbit 14 I, XX | up a permanent supply of heat in their present quarters, 15 I, XX | which is a bad conductor of heat, a sufficient amount of 16 I, XX | intensity of the solar light and heat, too, was very seriously 17 I, XX | All at once, in the very heat of his argument, Procope 18 I, XX | no doubt the life, the heat we want is reserved for 19 I, XX | and capable of conducting heat.~“Follow me!” shouted Servadac 20 I, XX | that the grateful light and heat of this huge excavation 21 I, XXI | were, by which the internal heat exuded from the heart of 22 I, XXI | best possible use of the heat which nature had provided 23 I, XXI | which by the action of the heat was here capable of fissure) 24 I, XXI | already stated, with light and heat.~The torrent of lava fell 25 I, XXIII| of the volcanic light and heat which were being enjoyed 26 I, XXIII| source of all light and heat, and the cold was consequently 27 II, V | that was kept liquid by the heat of the lava-torrent, the 28 II, VIII | the amount of light and heat received by the planet is 29 II, IX | the sun. Though light and heat were now reduced to a twenty-fifth 30 II, X | hundredth part of the light and heat which that luminary bestows 31 II, XI | The sole source of the heat that had enabled them to 32 II, XII | awhile a certain amount of heat at the heart after the extremities 33 II, XII | already to be a conductor of heat. Only succeed in piercing 34 II, XII | transmitting considerable heat to inferior strata.~Lieutenant 35 II, XII | them all, if the volcanic heat should really be subsiding, 36 II, XII | unlikely that the internal heat will fail us now before 37 II, XII | failure of the internal heat, I am not quite sure that 38 II, XIII | lava for their supply of heat; they, no doubt, had had 39 II, XVI | will be transmuted into heat, and that heat will be so 40 II, XVI | transmuted into heat, and that heat will be so intense that 41 II, XVI | expansive action of the inner heat, Gallia, like Gambart’s


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