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Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea
noun
- a novel (1870) by Jules Verne.
Example Sentences
Its leader was Shen Zaiwang, an English translator in Sichuan province’s Foreign Affairs Department who fell in love with sci-fi as a child after reading Jules Verne books like “Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea.”
“The Mystery of Milky Seas,” by Michelle Nijhuis, should have described Pierre Aronnax as a marine biologist in Jules Verne’s 1870 novel Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea.
In Jules Verne's novel Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, written almost two decades later, the fictional submarine pilot Pierre Aronnax is less perturbed by his voyage through a milky sea in the Bay of Bengal, calmly informing his assistant that “the whiteness which surprises you is caused only by the presence of myriads of infusoria, a sort of luminous little worm, gelatinous and without color.”
After moving to London in 1974, he built his high-tech Nemo Studios — named for Captain Nemo from the Jules Verne fantasy-adventure novel “Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea.”
What 10-year-old wouldn’t be thrilled to unwrap a copy of “Journey to the Center of the Earth” or “Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea”?
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