(1) The programme will feature the intrepid Adam Nicolson on one leg of an epic voyage of discovery that took him six months to complete and that gives viewers a wholly different view of the world.
(2) In 1863 she made her maiden voyage to China and Australia.
(3) As they voyage through space, the crew have to contend with anti-gravity failures, annoying talking doors and wars with alien races.
(4) Seven British warships and support vessels have set off on a voyage around the world to mark the new millennium.
(5) OpenUniverse lets you voyage through a simulated solar system, another test of graphics performance.
(6) We began the return voyage sometime after breakfast.
(7) The Human Genome Project is one of the great feats of exploration in history, an inward voyage of discovery rather than an outward exploration of Earth or the cosmos.
(8) Liu won fame as the first Chinese to complete a solo voyage around the world.
(9) The Queen Mary 2 is definitely a luxuriant vessel upon which to voyage the Atlantic ocean.
(10) One of the features of Edinburgh that enchanted me on my voyage of discovery two years ago was the Book Festival in Charlotte Square Gardens.
(11) A six-year voyage to Jupiter
(12) The Galileo unmanned spacecraft is about to conclude a 14-year voyage of exploration to Jupiter and its moons.
(13) Although the two ships crossed paths several times on the return voyage , they never made contact.
(14) Titanic enthusiast Steve Rigby will embark on a voyage of discovery when he set sails on an expedition to see the wreck of the great ship this summer.
(15) My recent boat trip down the Li River was like a voyage back in time.
(16) The problem is that the mundane nature of a long sea voyage is being shown to the audience.
(17) His voyage to America
(18) It made me realise that Manchester had a really great music scene, and it set me off on a voyage of discovery around some of Manchester's record shops.
(19) The island is much the same way as it was when James Cook sailed by on his way home from his voyage of discovery in 1770.
(20) Eventually the compass made its way to Europe and onto the ships Christopher Columbus used to voyage across the Atlantic.