Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
heartiness 1
hearts 8
hearty 1
heat 43
heat-an 1
heated 3
heathen 1
Frequency    [«  »]
44 together
44 try
43 following
43 heat
43 rapidly
43 seemed
43 terrible
Jules Verne
The Mysterious Island

IntraText - Concordances

heat

   Part,  Chapter
1 1,5| the smoke did not take the heat out with it, would be enough 2 1,9| had been transformed into heat, according to the new theory, 3 1,9| would have been enough to heat the boiler of a steamer! 4 1,0| which had furnished the heat which so astonished Pencroft. 5 1,2| felt no sensation either of heat or cold. Therefore it has 6 1,3| substances. The part which heat plays in these transformations 7 1,3| bricks and bake them by the heat of a wood fire. ~Generally 8 1,3| stones, when decomposed by heat, made a very strong quicklime, 9 1,7| set fire to the wood, the heat was communicated to the 10 1,7| placed in pots, and the heat from the furnace would distil 11 1,0| in which is stored the heat of the summer. When winter 12 1,0| comes, it restores this heat, which insures for the regions 13 1,0| and exposed to all the heat of the midday sun. The place 14 1,1| Mount Franklin. The powerful heat of the coal was greatly 15 1,1| surface the same amount of heat. If, then, the moon has 16 1,1| their turn, uninhabitable; heat will die away, as does the 17 1,1| will die away, as does the heat from a body when the soul 18 1,1| be feared that during the heat miasmas would arise, which 19 2,7| the month of December, the heat was very great. In spite 20 2,8| beginning of the year 1866 the heat was very great, but the 21 2,8| Providence gave them. ~After the heat of these warm summer days, 22 2,9| commencement of the month, and the heat was excessive. The atmosphere 23 2,9| ground supplied coal to heat the kiln to the wished-for 24 2,0| of these baits? Why, the heat of his stomach will melt 25 2,1| increased its power of retaining heat in proportion. Now the wool 26 2,1| steamers and engines! water to heat water!" ~"Yes, but water 27 2,1| inexhaustible source of heat and light, of an intensity 28 2,1| want of either light or heat as long as the productions 29 2,1| coal are exhausted we shall heat and warm ourselves with 30 2,8| sea-breezes tempered the heat of the atmosphere and procured 31 2,8| anything to fear from the heat, for the sun's rays scarcely 32 2,8| of conceit. ~The summer heat ended with the month of 33 3,9| weather was fine, and the heat began to be great. The forests 34 3,1| magnificent weather, great heat, and a tropical temperature, 35 3,2| superb vegetation found a heat in this soil, damp in its 36 3,4| restoring during the winter the heat which it received during 37 3,5| kilns heated to a white heat. This apparatus, similar 38 3,6| hand-it was of a feverish heat. Ayrton, Pencroft, Herbert, 39 3,7| which supplied not only heat and light, but the mechanical 40 3,8| season. For some days the heat was overpowering, and the 41 3,9| suddenly expanded by intense heat. The water, rushing into 42 3,9| solidified others, at boiling heat, covered them immediately. ~ 43 3,9| were dried up by a tropical heat, the forest caught fire


IntraText® (V89) Copyright 1996-2007 EuloTech SRL