Book, Chapter
1 I, VII | have been increased by some millions of miles. He was rather
2 I, VIII | to between two and three millions of miles, and the intensity
3 I, XII | normal distance of ninety-one millions of miles was greatly increased,
4 I, XVIII| world was more than eighty millions of leagues away from Gourbi
5 I, XIX | comprehend that he is flying away millions and millions of leagues
6 I, XIX | flying away millions and millions of leagues from all his
7 I, XX | Gallia must now be a hundred millions of leagues from the sun,
8 I, XXII | Lieutenant Procope; “the earth is millions and millions of leagues
9 I, XXII | the earth is millions and millions of leagues away, and it
10 I, XXIV | the month of March twenty millions of leagues less than she
11 I, XXIV | increased by thirty-two millions of leagues. She was now,
12 II, II | to-day we are just three millions of leagues away from Europe.”~
13 II, IV | conviction that he was indeed millions and millions of miles away
14 II, IV | was indeed millions and millions of miles away from the earth,
15 II, VIII | an orbit measuring 2,976 millions of miles; and that his rotation
16 II, VIII | nebulosity, thousands of millions of centuries back. Uranus,
17 II, VIII | amounting to many hundred millions of centuries. Jupiter, the
18 II, X | an orbit measuring 5,490 millions of miles in length. His
19 II, X | his superficies, 144,000 millions of square miles; his volume,
20 II, X | miles; his volume, 143,846 millions of cubic miles. Saturn is
21 II, X | constellation Lyra is 100 millions of millions of miles away;
22 II, X | Lyra is 100 millions of millions of miles away; Sirius in
23 II, X | Sirius in Canis Major, 123 millions of millions; the Pole-star,
24 II, X | Canis Major, 123 millions of millions; the Pole-star, 282 millions
25 II, X | millions; the Pole-star, 282 millions of millions; and Capella,
26 II, X | Pole-star, 282 millions of millions; and Capella, 340 millions
27 II, X | millions; and Capella, 340 millions of millions of miles, a
28 II, X | Capella, 340 millions of millions of miles, a figure represented
29 II, X | circumscribed to little over 1,500 millions of miles; and, in comparison
30 II, XVI | comet will be raised to some millions of degrees.”~No one having
|