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| Alphabetical [« »] hull 28 hullo 1 hum 2 human 44 humanity 11 humanly 1 humble 3 | Frequency [« »] 45 speak 44 bottom 44 enormous 44 human 44 northern 44 operation 44 position | Jules Verne The Mysterious Island IntraText - Concordances human |
Part, Chapter
1 1,1| all that men could do. No human efforts could save them 2 1,2| which united ought to insure human success-activity of mind 3 1,5| trace on the sand; not a human footstep on all that part 4 1,5| never been visited by a human being. The sea was as deserted 5 1,6| destitute of any sign of human life. Pencroft only saw 6 1,6| nor the impression of a human foot. On this they might 7 1,8| to have been visited by a human creature. The shells, those 8 1,8| and you found no traces of human beings on this coast?" ~" 9 1,9| science, a possessor of all human knowledge. It was better 10 1,0| astonished eye, as if they saw human bipeds for the first time. 11 1,1| Nowhere could the work of a human hand be perceived. Not a 12 1,2| same temperature as the human body, which is about ninety-five 13 1,2| and war is as old as the human race-unhappily." ~"Faith, 14 1,6| the interior; but if no human beings are found, I fear 15 1,8| the first time visited by human beings. They did not speak, 16 1,8| there, not an animal, not a human being; and yet Top continued 17 1,0| some mode or other, but no human power could supply another 18 1,1| vegetation will follow the human emigration. The flora will 19 2,1| researches they had made, no human being had been discovered. 20 2,1| a firearm, and who but a human being could have used such 21 2,1| than desire the presence of human beings on our island." ~" 22 2,2| them these productions of human industry? Their thanks rose 23 2,3| vegetable giants as well as human giants, and they are no 24 2,5| if it is certain that a human being set foot on the island, 25 2,5| yet saw no signs of any human being having passed that 26 2,5| difficult to fancy that any human creature had ever passed 27 2,6| contrary it was the work of a human being; but they also had 28 2,6| their resemblance to the human race. However, Herbert declared 29 2,6| be possessed of an almost human intelligence. Employed in 30 2,6| eyes, rather smaller than human eyes, sparkled with intelligence; 31 2,3| part, not the print of a human foot on the shore of the 32 2,3| origin, if works due to a human hand, showed incontestably 33 2,4| which there was nothing human. ~Pencroft and Gideon Spilett 34 2,4| was not an ape; it was a human being, a man. But what a 35 2,4| man has no longer anything human about him!" ~The reporter 36 2,4| must add that they are more human than one could expect from 37 2,4| savage. We went to look for a human creature, and we are bringing 38 2,5| longer to belong to the human species. ~"And that's just 39 2,5| being had no longer anything human about him, and yet Harding, 40 2,5| stranger resumed a more human appearance, and it even 41 3,5| if the intervention of a human being is not more questionable 42 3,6| profound disgust for all human beings, filled with hatred 43 3,7| painful things, and beyond human endurance. I die of having 44 3,9| Isla nd, and from which no human power could deliver them. ~"