Book, Chapter
1 I, VII | condition, would fail to supply sufficient oxygen, and that. the stove,
2 I, IX | well-sheltered creek of sufficient depth to accommodate a vessel
3 I, XIII | for the royal salute.~A sufficient number of charges having
4 I, XV | say that he considered it sufficient to produce so tremendous
5 I, XIX | brandy, and other stores sufficient for about two months; secondly,
6 I, XX | bad conductor of heat, a sufficient amount of warmth for animal
7 I, XX | intolerable.~One glance was sufficient to satisfy the explorers
8 I, XXII | slight shock will often be sufficient to convert it into solid
9 I, XXIII| of the sun did not afford sufficient basis even for an approximate
10 I, XXIV | already estimated, with sufficient approximation to truth,
11 I, XXIV | already attained would be sufficient to carry him to the land.
12 II, III | and whether he had learned sufficient of Gallia’s path through
13 II, VI | the cabin, however, was sufficient justification for the orderly’
14 II, X | gathered, but these were sufficient to give a large amount of
15 II, XIII | have had leisure more than sufficient for solving the most abstruse
16 II, XV | had been reserved, just sufficient to convey them to Gourbi
17 II, XV | Provided with a compass, a sufficient supply of cold meat, and
18 II, XV | rose above the rock was sufficient evidence that good fires
19 II, XVI | in launching ourselves a sufficient time beforehand into Gallia’
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