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| Alphabetical [« »] contented 13 contenting 1 contents 3 continent 29 continents 9 contingency 3 continual 2 | Frequency [« »] 30 wounded 29 carry 29 cave 29 continent 29 creature 29 crossed 29 discover | Jules Verne The Mysterious Island IntraText - Concordances continent |
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1 1,1| perish! ~There was not a continent, nor even an island, visible 2 1,1| whether an island or a continent, for they did not know to 3 1,3| had been thrown, not on a continent, not even on an island, 4 1,3| whether it belonged to a continent. But on beholding the convulsed 5 1,4| the land itself, island or continent, it appeared fertile, agreeable 6 1,6| without trying to know to what continent it belonged, if it was inhabited, 7 1,8| attempted to utter. ~"Island or continent?" he murmured. ~"Bother 8 1,8| he murmured. ~"Bother the continent," cried Pencroft hastily; " 9 1,8| help repeating,-~"Island or continent! To think of that, when 10 1,8| it was, whether island or continent), the discovery of the Chimneys, 11 1,9| words were:-~"Island or continent?" This was his uppermost 12 1,9| us on an island, or on a continent?" ~"No, captain," replied 13 1,9| this land is an island or a continent. Till then, I repeat, there 14 1,9| plain. Either we are on a continent, and then, at the expense 15 1,9| whether it is an island or a continent," asked Gideon Spilett, " 16 1,0| the question of "island or continent," to which he attached so 17 1,0| connected in the west with some continent of the Pacific? It could 18 1,3| either from the American continent or Australia, or from the 19 1,4| inhabited island, or from a continent. We shall know in an hour. 20 1,1| all the aspects which a continent presents, and I should not 21 1,1| be surprised if it was a continent formerly." ~"What! a continent 22 1,1| continent formerly." ~"What! a continent in the middle of the Pacific?" 23 1,1| are but the summits of a continent, now submerged, but which 24 1,1| have been a part of that continent?" asked Pencroft. ~"It is 25 1,1| been a part of some vast continent which had gradually sunk 26 1,1| the rest of this ancient continent may disappear in its turn, 27 1,1| day be changed into a vast continent, which new generations will 28 1,1| the foundation of a new continent under the Equator, and may 29 1,2| countries?" ~"On the new continent," replied the lad, "they