Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
killing 1
kilogramme 24
kilogrammes 7
kind 29
kindest 1
kindle 1
kindled 2
Frequency    [«  »]
29 five
29 formed
29 impossible
29 kind
29 mass
29 order
29 quarters
Jules Verne
Off on a Comet

IntraText - Concordances

kind

   Book,  Chapter
1 I, I | assert, in an affair of this kind, cannot possibly entitle 2 I, I | ostensible pretext of some kind. Shall we allege a musical 3 I, V | experienced anything of this kind before; it must be peculiar 4 I, VII | the poet has called:~“The kind companion of terrestrial 5 I, VIII | necessity of extemporizing a kind of parasol for himself, 6 I, VIII | situation, and struggled into a kind of conviction that if there 7 I, X | a material object of any kind was to be noticed floating 8 I, X | brought up nothing but a kind of metallic dust, which 9 I, XI | see an erection of some kind quite distinctly. Who can 10 I, XI | their progress arrested by a kind of wall, or rampart of singular 11 I, XI | tomb of the very simplest kind, and above the tomb was 12 I, XIV | of the coast had formed a kind of cove, which, though hardly 13 I, XIV | which, although only a kind of casemate hollowed in 14 I, XVII | and stopped in front of a kind of cave or burrow that was 15 I, XIX | cotton, clothing of every kind, shoes of all sizes, caps 16 I, XX | retained in excavations of this kind. After a long consultation 17 I, XX | But no advantage of this kind could compensate for the 18 I, XX | is that?” he said, with a kind of hesitation. “No, I am 19 I, XX | greatly deceived, I can hear a kind of reverberation in the 20 I, XXIII| that these birds acted as a kind of police, never failing 21 I, XXIV | was proposed to erect a kind of wooden roof lined with 22 II, I | as calculations of this kind are ordinarily based upon 23 II, V | brother, and everybody is so kind. I am afraid they will spoil 24 II, V | count; “we should see what kind of a life the misanthrope 25 II, VI | care. It was of an ordinary kind. A spring balance, fitted 26 II, VIII | reckoned?~Speculations of this kind became more and more frequent, 27 II, XI | without accident of any kind; and when the stores of 28 II, XIII | to creep over everyone a kind of moral torpor as well 29 II, XVII | prospect of accompanying their kind protectors on any fresh


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