Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 5 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 109395 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 79 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 God 5 England 4 great 4 Lord 4 English 4 America 3 old 3 like 3 german 3 day 3 India 3 Gipsy 3 Gipsies 3 Europe 3 Borrow 2 word 2 time 2 little 2 hungarian 2 gypsy 2 find 2 child 2 Sir 2 Romany 2 New 2 Mr. 2 London 2 John 2 George 2 Egypt 2 Dr. 1 work 1 woman 1 witch 1 water 1 translation 1 tell 1 slavonian 1 scripture 1 russian 1 rom 1 power 1 people 1 pen 1 mean 1 magic 1 love 1 look 1 life 1 language Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1432 man 1001 time 967 people 908 word 794 day 771 child 768 gypsy 689 race 677 language 653 woman 649 country 591 life 575 year 543 way 516 horse 512 name 475 family 465 tribe 450 part 450 house 447 world 440 blood 429 place 388 thing 378 gipsy 361 one 353 hand 339 manner 337 eye 332 person 326 fact 325 work 321 other 318 gentleman 317 witch 310 kind 298 wife 294 girl 287 tent 287 friend 285 nothing 279 subject 277 character 264 fortune 261 lady 258 number 257 law 253 money 245 night 243 head Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 7949 _ 2572 Gipsies 2308 Gipsy 425 English 338 England 337 Scotland 312 God 307 Jews 297 Romany 281 Mr. 270 Rommany 267 Scottish 263 te 229 Europe 197 India 180 John 168 America 161 Egypt 154 Bunyan 148 Sir 137 Baillie 127 Jew 122 Lord 120 | 119 Borrow 114 thou 107 Egyptians 103 o 101 London 100 James 99 Dr. 97 sar 94 tu 94 c. 89 Yetholm 89 Spain 88 Scott 86 Charles 85 William 77 Walter 77 New 76 Mr 75 Tinklers 74 Christians 71 ye 70 ta 70 . 66 East 65 Spanish 63 Germany Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6073 it 5219 i 4163 he 4006 they 2480 them 1723 you 1626 him 1461 she 1352 me 1123 we 572 themselves 544 her 401 himself 362 us 155 itself 102 myself 93 one 77 herself 65 thee 61 ''em 29 ourselves 28 yourself 23 mine 22 theirs 11 ye 10 em 8 yek 7 yours 7 thyself 6 ''s 4 yoi 4 ours 4 his 3 thy 3 hers 2 sik 1 yag 1 ya 1 with:-- 1 whence 1 tuà 1 translated:-- 1 them.--_borrow 1 t''re 1 repeat-- 1 pelf 1 one--_you 1 o 1 ne 1 na Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 21497 be 6702 have 1737 do 1717 say 1158 know 981 take 973 find 969 make 961 go 907 see 887 give 869 come 633 call 602 tell 558 speak 491 follow 429 get 420 think 409 hear 405 become 403 look 403 appear 375 believe 362 leave 348 live 345 seem 339 bring 317 meet 311 put 309 ask 284 pass 282 mean 269 use 262 keep 255 show 252 observe 252 mention 250 steal 235 let 234 carry 234 bear 225 die 219 write 217 consider 214 suppose 213 understand 210 hold 204 receive 201 learn 199 enter Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3234 not 1397 so 1312 very 1031 other 975 great 936 more 914 old 883 many 747 such 746 well 745 much 744 then 701 up 655 little 647 as 643 only 620 same 597 good 591 never 570 now 538 most 518 out 510 own 493 even 418 first 417 also 397 long 385 once 359 ever 350 here 344 always 332 few 314 young 309 however 305 still 305 often 303 away 298 down 298 common 295 present 292 far 277 again 274 certain 272 there 270 poor 267 almost 254 gypsy 248 generally 247 all 245 last Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 211 least 119 most 117 good 58 great 39 high 38 low 30 early 29 slight 26 old 23 eld 19 near 19 bad 12 young 12 fine 11 Most 9 strong 9 deep 7 poor 6 simple 6 late 5 small 5 large 5 handsome 5 clever 4 wild 4 vile 4 manif 4 common 3 quaint 3 pure 3 long 3 j 3 gross 3 full 3 extreme 3 close 3 bold 3 big 2 weak 2 true 2 sweet 2 strange 2 stout 2 rough 2 rich 2 remote 2 noble 2 mean 2 l 2 fair Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 419 most 19 well 15 least 1 witch-_aura_--the 1 soon 1 lightest 1 gypsiest 1 furtherest 1 darkest 1 coldest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- 2 ccx074@pglaf.org 1 ccx074@coventry.ac.uk Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 15 _ is _ 10 gipsies are not 8 _ was _ 8 gipsies are very 8 gipsies do not 5 _ are _ 5 gipsies did not 5 gipsies were very 4 _ do n''t 4 _ had _ 4 _ has _ 4 gipsies have not 4 people do not 3 gipsies are gipsies 3 gipsies are now 3 gipsies are still 3 gipsies were not 3 gipsy is not 2 _ being _ 2 _ did _ 2 _ do _ 2 _ does _ 2 _ does not 2 _ is genteel 2 _ living _ 2 _ were not 2 blood is mixed 2 child is now 2 children are often 2 country are very 2 gipsies are again 2 gipsies are always 2 gipsies are british 2 gipsies are gradually 2 gipsies are quite 2 gipsies are so 2 gipsies had not 2 gipsies have always 2 gipsies have doubtless 2 gipsies have even 2 gipsies have excellent 2 gipsies have never 2 gipsies left india 2 gipsy is _ 2 gipsy is as 2 gipsy is naturally 2 gipsy was not 2 gypsies are _ 2 gypsies are not 2 gypsies do not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 man knows no more 1 _ does not merely 1 _ were not at 1 _ were not egyptian 1 children have no food 1 children is not yet 1 country have not much 1 gipsies are not egyptians 1 gipsies are not natives 1 gipsies are not singular 1 gipsies are not strangers 1 gipsies are not very 1 gipsies do not still 1 gipsies had no religious 1 gipsies had not even 1 gipsies have not much 1 gipsies have not only 1 gipsies tell no lies 1 gipsies were not hardly 1 gipsy is not egyptian 1 gipsy is not fond 1 gipsy is not perverse 1 gipsy was not always 1 gypsies is not all 1 gypsy has no such 1 gypsy have no words 1 language has no alphabet 1 language is not very 1 life is not worth 1 men are not rarities 1 men had no names 1 name was not brown 1 name was not middleton 1 people are not only 1 people do not directly 1 people does not entirely 1 race does not necessarily 1 race goes no further 1 race had no existence 1 race has not only 1 race is no exception 1 times had no home 1 tribes have no more 1 word is not too A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 19852 author = Crabb, James title = The Gipsies'' Advocate Or, Observations on the Origin, Character, Manners, and Habits of the English Gipsies date = keywords = Christ; Christians; Committee; England; Gipsies; Gipsy; God; Lord; Sir; Southampton; author; child; great; scripture summary = Public a brief account of the people called Gipsies, now wandering in little sister of a Gipsy youth seventeen years of age, was taken ill with Lord Teignmouth once said to a young Gipsy woman in Hindostanee, _Tue Gipsies generally have their children baptized at the church near which Bible, as a book that tells poor sinners the way to God. He gave a woman this, the author saw this poor Gipsy in his tent, in the last stage of a many of the Gipsy people treated the women with great contempt, for woman;" said the author, "are these your children?" "Yes, sir," replied The next day he visited the camp again, when the widow woman said, "Sir, reformed Gipsies for a short time, and we had considerable hopes of them To visit the Gipsies in their tents is of great importance. The following letter was addressed to the author by a Gipsy woman when id = 16358 author = Leland, Charles Godfrey title = The English Gipsies and Their Language date = keywords = America; Avali; Borrow; Duvel; Egypt; England; English; GUDLO; Gipsies; Gipsy; God; Gorgios; Hindustani; India; Rhagarin; Rommanis; Rommany; day; german; great; language; life; like; mean; old; pen; rom; translation; word summary = learn, from a by no means dull gipsy, whether the latter word was known "Now then, tell me this _adree Rommanis_, in Gipsy--Once upon a time English _path_, the Gipsy patteran, the Rommany-Hindu _pat_, a foot, and And so we Gipsies always burn an ashfire every Great Day. For the Saviour was born in the open field like a that this is simply the Gipsy word Gorgio, which often means a man in the DICK, an English slang word for sight, or seeing, is purely Gipsy in its DRUM or DROM, is the common English Gipsy word for a road. many English Gipsy words themselves, which, as belonging to a language in Boro Duvel, or "Great God," an Old Gipsy term for Water--Bishnoo or source was given one day, when I asked a Gipsy if he knew such a word as single secret or hidden word in English Gipsy or in any other Rommany id = 22939 author = Leland, Charles Godfrey title = The Gypsies date = keywords = America; Anselo; Borrow; Britannia; Cooper; Egypt; England; English; Europe; George; God; Gorgio; India; John; Lee; London; Lord; Moscow; Mr.; Mrs.; Palmer; Romanes; Romany; Shelta; St.; Thames; come; day; european; find; german; good; great; gypsy; hear; hungarian; like; little; look; old; russian; tell; time; word summary = AUTHOR OF "THE ENGLISH GYPSIES AND THEIR LANGUAGE," "ANGLO-ROMANY English-born Romany rye, or gentleman speaking gypsy, would in like of second-rate Romanys or gypsies, gypsified for exhibition, like Mr. Barnum''s negro minstrel, who, though black as a coal by nature, was more gypsy words than did my new friends, and that our English Romany far Wishing to know if my pretty friend could understand an English gypsy good-natured, smiling man, who looked like a German gypsy, mounting a It is a common part of gypsy life that the father shall be away all day, "Word-Book of the Romany Language," "with many pieces in gypsy, old sorceress led a lady into the little parlor, the gypsy man, whose "I think," said he, "that the last time the gypsies Romanys did not mean real gypsies; he used the word as it occurs in gypsies as old Charlotte Cooper herself, none of them could speak Romany. id = 58465 author = Leland, Charles Godfrey title = Gypsy Sorcery and Fortune Telling Illustrated by numerous incantations, specimens of medical magic, anecdotes and tales date = keywords = Algonkin; America; Church; Dr.; East; England; English; Europe; Faust; Folk; George; God; Krauss; London; Lord; New; Romany; Saint; Wlislocki; child; day; evil; find; form; german; great; gypsy; hungarian; indian; like; little; love; magic; old; power; slavonian; time; water; witch; woman; work summary = HUNGARIAN GYPSY SPELLS--A CURIOUS OLD ITALIAN "SECRET"-current among gypsies, as regards fortune-telling, witch-doctoring, form, and to-day it is called by gypsies in Germany, as in England, which is called the bicápen, pronounced like the English gypsy word GYPSY SPELLS--A CURIOUS OLD ITALIAN "SECRET"--THE MAGIC VIRTUE OF The great love of gypsy mothers for their children, says Wlislocki, SOUTH SLAVONIAN AND OTHER GYPSY WITCH-LORE.--THE WORDS FOR A SOUTH SLAVONIAN AND OTHER GYPSY WITCH-LORE.--THE WORDS FOR A I have known an old English gypsy who believed that dogs could the gypsies because in the old time it was regarded as a devil of a "The gypsy girls of Transylvania believe that spells to ''know that in the old time gypsy girls made a peculiar kind of cake, a Romany The English gypsies believe in witches, among their own people, and and Sayings relating to Fairies, Witches, and Gypsies," and bears the id = 39665 author = Simson, Walter title = A History of the Gipsies: with Specimens of the Gipsy Language date = keywords = America; Baillie; Blackwood; Borrow; Britain; Bunyan; Charles; Christian; Dr.; Dunbar; Edinburgh; Egyptians; England; English; Europe; Faa; Faw; Fife; Gipsies; Gipsy; Gipsydom; Gitanos; God; Grellmann; India; Irish; James; Jews; John; Linlithgow; Lochgellie; Lord; Magazine; Moses; Mr.; New; Scotch; Scotland; Scottish; Sir; Spain; Spanish; Tinklers; Tweed; Walter; William; Wilson; Yetholm; jewish; people summary = speaks of certain tents of people whom he met in India, as Gipsies. Gipsies, in some places, is welcomed, at certain times of the year, as This may especially be said of a people like the Gipsies; for, having, the Gipsies as a whole people--men, women, and children--from Scotland. Like their race generally, these Gipsies were extremely civil and The Gipsy chiefs in Scotland appear, at one time, to have received a [136] A great many of the Scottish Gipsies, in former times, carried On another occasion, a Gipsy woman entered a country public-house, language of the Gipsies in Scotland, at the present day, as will be seen first time, I believe, that he ever heard a Scottish Gipsy word The following Scottish Gipsy words appear to have some relation to the Gipsies, at least those who follow the original ways of their race; and