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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 10 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 9513 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 8 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 Arabia 5 God 4 Sultan 4 Mohammed 4 India 4 Arabs 3 Sea 3 Red 3 Mount 3 Moslem 3 Ibn 3 Egypt 3 Bedouin 3 Allah 3 Ali 2 woman 2 turkish 2 illustration 2 great 2 day 2 camel 2 arab 2 Wady 2 Sheikh 2 Sharif 2 Prophet 2 Persia 2 Pasha 2 Mecca 2 Koran 2 Islam 2 Indians 2 East 2 Desert 2 Damascus 2 Christians 2 Cairo 2 Bahrein 2 Baghdad 2 Bab 2 Arafat 2 Aden 2 Abu 2 Abdullah 1 topsy 1 time 1 portuguese 1 place 1 moorish 1 man Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1882 man 1855 day 1573 time 1404 place 1197 water 1050 woman 1032 town 1027 camel 1008 people 954 house 932 country 891 part 789 year 748 way 730 hand 706 stone 703 name 695 foot 644 night 638 side 629 hour 616 tribe 596 mountain 565 one 565 city 558 work 545 head 524 pilgrim 512 king 510 tree 508 n. 477 prayer 465 mosque 463 son 463 husband 450 life 447 word 441 wall 439 other 429 ground 424 valley 417 road 412 tomb 411 eye 406 wife 406 sea 403 nothing 397 child 395 number 383 mile Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 4541 � 1599 Al 1465 _ 1215 i. 849 Mekka 754 al 672 ii 667 Mohammed 611 Arabs 585 Arabia 512 Allah 488 Khaled 471 Egypt 448 Prophet 435 el 428 Madinah 426 n. 414 Sultan 400 A.D. 389 Meccah 375 God 370 bin 353 Djidda 339 Bedouin 337 Medina 329 s 322 Ali 321 Ibn 305 India 301 Pasha 297 Hedjaz 295 El 292 Zehowah 289 Mosque 285 Abu 279 Cairo 251 East 248 Kanana 247 Moslem 236 Abdullah 233 Moors 228 Arabic 225 Mosul 223 Bab 213 Persia 208 King 202 Koran 202 Hadj 200 Sherif 200 Sheikh Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 7377 it 5880 they 5834 he 4735 i 4555 we 2846 them 2423 him 1808 you 1288 us 1236 me 1168 she 530 her 507 himself 453 themselves 167 itself 124 myself 114 ourselves 97 one 67 herself 62 thee 36 yourself 26 mine 22 ours 18 s 17 his 10 theirs 7 yours 7 ya 6 hers 6 em 4 ye 4 ezzin 3 thyself 2 � 2 thy 1 |zode 1 |thluf 1 |[dh=]i''l 1 |(they 1 yunus, 1 whereof 1 whence 1 wa 1 oneself 1 o 1 malihin, 1 helf 1 dà 1 certeza 1 ce Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 31416 be 8798 have 2147 say 2124 do 1733 make 1696 call 1619 see 1520 take 1501 come 1466 go 1160 find 1115 give 889 know 741 bring 714 leave 703 pass 618 tell 588 think 586 use 581 look 550 hear 544 carry 536 send 526 keep 502 stand 487 get 476 become 458 follow 444 live 433 begin 429 ask 420 die 418 enter 410 sit 384 speak 382 return 377 put 372 reach 366 pay 360 appear 357 turn 356 visit 354 remain 351 build 350 cover 346 lie 344 eat 334 receive 327 seem 322 fall Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4155 not 2181 very 1807 great 1744 many 1706 so 1635 other 1291 much 1244 more 1242 only 1233 then 1147 up 1043 also 1025 little 1021 good 1001 first 987 here 967 well 901 most 874 as 863 large 849 now 819 long 811 small 805 out 718 there 718 few 661 same 661 about 612 old 578 even 571 down 569 never 555 still 553 own 529 always 505 again 497 far 477 such 463 last 463 however 458 high 446 several 439 often 424 once 410 white 391 away 390 whole 386 arab 382 too 372 off Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 229 good 215 most 145 least 83 great 61 high 49 Most 40 large 28 small 28 low 24 rich 22 fine 22 early 22 bad 21 slight 21 near 17 eld 12 hot 11 strong 11 old 10 young 10 poor 10 late 7 wise 7 pure 7 long 7 l 7 j 6 wild 6 deep 6 cheap 6 able 5 short 5 noble 5 gross 5 fleet 5 faint 5 brave 4 wealthy 4 safe 4 mydd 4 light 4 fair 4 easy 4 dark 4 clean 3 wide 3 say 3 rude 3 narrow 3 manif Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 686 most 35 least 21 well 2 highest 2 hard 1 oldest 1 near 1 lowest 1 lest 1 fast Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 dp.rastko.net Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://dp.rastko.net Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 country is very 6 place called el 6 water is very 6 women do not 5 women are very 4 people are very 3 camels were not 3 country are very 3 country being very 3 name is _ 3 name was abdullah 3 people are great 3 time goes on 3 water is not 3 water was very 3 way was very 3 � is not 2 _ is not 2 camels were very 2 countries do not 2 country is not 2 country was so 2 hour went by 2 houses are very 2 man is here 2 man is not 2 man was so 2 mekka are not 2 mekka is very 2 men are generally 2 men are very 2 men had very 2 mohammed is allah 2 names are here 2 names are not 2 part are now 2 people are much 2 people are not 2 people are so 2 people have many 2 place called al 2 time is not 2 water is always 2 water is excellent 2 water is heavy 2 woman does not 2 women were busy 2 � are now 2 � having thus 2 � says gibbon Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 mekka are not so 1 _ was not too 1 camel hears no voices 1 camels had not drunk 1 camels is not true 1 camels were not present 1 country is not as 1 foot was not yet 1 hour was not yet 1 man has no companions 1 man is not yet 1 mekka is not much 1 mohammed had not yet 1 part do not impiously 1 people are not so 1 people have no ice 1 people have no intercourse 1 people were not satisfied 1 place has not always 1 time is not valuable 1 time passes no child 1 water be not procurable 1 water is not deep 1 water is not good 1 woman has no special 1 women do not all 1 women is not at 1 years are not full 1 � is not insulting A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 19914 author = Arbuthnot, F. F. title = Arabic Authors A Manual of Arabian History and Literature date = keywords = A.D.; Abd; Abu; Abul; Ali; Arabian; Baghdad; Bakr; Egypt; Europe; God; Harun; Ibn; Islam; Khalif; Koran; Mamun; Mecca; Muhammad; Nights; Prophet; Spain; arab; arabic summary = Spanish Arab Khalifs; description of Baghdad; reign of to it, long before Muhammad''s time, the Arabs had brought yearly Arabian history, beginning from the time of Muhammad, as his Koran was many Arabic works were translated into Latin, which thus facilitated in the words of Makkari, the original Arab author of that work, and in history, but also the literature of the Arabs begins with Muhammad. translating the works of the Arab chroniclers Abul-Faraj, Al-Makin, places, reproduce old Arabic works of value, but more translations (translated from Persian into Arabic by Ibn Al-Mukaffa about A.D. 750), and another Persian work, not now extant, but known as the stories in Arabic literature, and called ''The Thousand and One The work of the translation of Arabic and Persian stories was details of the life of the Arabs before Muhammad''s time, and even Two stories have been selected from the celebrated Arabic work id = 21569 author = Bent, Theodore, Mrs. title = Southern Arabia date = keywords = Aden; Ali; Arabia; Bahrein; Bedouin; Bir; Dhofar; English; Gara; Gulf; Hadhramout; Hamoumi; Hassan; Imam; India; Jabberi; Kattiri; Koton; Mahri; Maskat; Mohammed; Mount; Oman; Persian; Ras; Red; Saleh; Sea; Sharif; Sheher; Sheikh; Shibahm; Sokotra; Soudan; Sultan; Talib; Wadi; Yafei; arab; camel; day; illustration; portuguese summary = Our road led us on through miles of palm-groves, watered by their little by land, goes a long way inland, and would take the medical man all day saying the sultan said he must have half a rupee a day for my horse, Our start took a very long time, for the sultan, attended by many people, The sultan went away to Shibahm the next day, and, as usual, the women to sit down and the camel-men said we must stay there the night, as there water is brackish, and he wanted us to go on before the camel-men came Then Ali, the chief of the camel-men, came and said he would not go We had great difficulty in getting the camels to face the water and carry That day, Sheikh Mohamed Ali Hamed, who was riding a loaded camel, came No sultan came, but next day a very affectionate letter from him said he id = 9457 author = Burckhardt, John Lewis title = Travels in Arabia; comprehending an account of those territories in Hedjaz which the Mohammedans regard as sacred date = keywords = A.H.; Aly; Arabia; Arabs; Arafat; Bab; Beni; Cairo; Constantinople; Damascus; Desert; Djebel; Djidda; East; Egypt; Ghaleb; God; Hadj; Hedjaz; Ibn; India; Kaaba; Kadhy; Medina; Mekka; Mekkawys; Mohammed; Pasha; Sherif; Sultan; Syria; Tayf; Wady; Wahabys; Yembo; Yemen; bedouin; turkish summary = since the positions of Djidda, Mekka, Medina, Tayf, and Yembo, the chief country between Tayf, Mekka, Medina, Yembo, and Djidda. town, called Bab Mekka and Bab el Medina, upon all provisions coming Mohammed Ali remained at Mekka and at Djidda, he received a regular present, assembled, on their return to Mekka, at the holy place called heard during prayers in the great mosque at Mekka, which at other times the time of Sultan Achmed, the son of Sultan Mohammed, (who died in A.H. 1027,) Egypt sent yearly to Mekka two hundred and ninety-five purses, caravan pays to Bedouins and Arabs, on its road to Mekka. Sherifs in Mekka and Djidda, great merchants, olemas, and all the chief Tayf and Medina being now halfruined, the merchants of Mekka resort to Djidda, as their only place of small parties of pilgrims in their route from Medina or Djidda to Mekka, poor people, in starting from Mekka for Medina with the great caravan, id = 4658 author = Burton, Richard Francis, Sir title = Personal Narrative of a Pilgrimage to Al-Madinah & Meccah — Volume 2 date = keywords = Abdullah; Abraham; Abu; Ali; Allah; Arabia; Arabs; Arafat; Bab; Badawin; Bakia; Benu; Bey; Burckhardt; Cairo; Caliph; Caravan; Damascus; Desert; East; Egypt; God; Hajj; Harim; Hijaz; Holy; Ibn; India; Indians; Islam; Jabal; Jeddah; Koran; Kuba; Lord; Madinah; Masjid; Meccah; Meccans; Mohammed; Moslem; Mosque; Mount; Mr.; Muna; North; Pasha; Prophet; Red; Sayyid; Sea; Sharif; Shaykh; South; Sultan; Thee; Thy; Wady; eastern; egyptian; place; turkish summary = Badawi appearance, and they dress in the old Arab style still affected Benu Ali are Badawin settled at the Awali, near the Kuba Mosque: they Meccah and Al-Madinah, a man will lose a she-camel and know her ceremony called Al-Sai, or the running seven times between Mounts Safa whitewashed walls, surrounding places of prayer, and a number of stone Arafat, anciently called Jabal Ilal ([Arabic]), �the Mount [FN#7] Al-Idrisi places Meccah forty (Arab) miles from Jeddah. ([Arabic]); hence the first day of pilgrimage is called Yaum Bekkah, or place of crowding, Meccah so called, ii. the Prophet to Al-Madinah, 354 Mosque of, 426 The place where he was Multazem, Al-, the place of prayer in the Ka�abah so called, ii. Musalla al-Nabi (Prophet�s place of prayer), in the Mosque of Al-Madinah, Al-Madinah, 259 The prayer at the Prophet�s Mosque, 309 The places of Al-Madinah to Meccah so called, ii. id = 34959 author = Crawford, F. Marion (Francis Marion) title = Khaled, A Tale of Arabia date = keywords = Abdullah; Allah; Almasta; Bedouin; Kerim; Khaled; Nejed; Riad; Sheikh; Sultan; Zehowah; answer; hand; love; man; woman summary = ''Allah knows,'' Khaled said, as though answering her. ''Tell the Sultan,'' said Khaled, ''that a man is here who has neither ''I come,'' said Khaled boldly, ''to ask your daughter Zehowah in marriage. ''I have seen this man, I have heard him speak,'' said Zehowah. When the time for the feast came the Sultan led Khaled into the great ''A dead man has no companions,'' said the Sultan, looking at Khaled to ''Khaled is the Sultan,'' said Zehowah. Khaled looked at Zehowah, but she said nothing, though she watched ''The Sultan Khaled loves black eyes,'' she said. then I killed him,'' said Khaled, and Zehowah could get no other answer, ''I think that so long as Khaled lives, Zehowah need not bear arms,'' said ''You also wish to know it, I see,'' said Khaled, looking at Zehowah If Khaled had been a man like other men, as Zehowah supposed him to be, id = 39853 author = French, Harry W. (Harry Willard) title = The Lance of Kanana: A Story of Arabia date = keywords = Allah; Arabia; Bedouin; Kahled; Kanana; Mecca; Mount; Omar; camel summary = be a man?" and three times Kanana replied, "My father, I can not lift a Kanana, whom thou scornest, will be far away upon the desert, The moment the sun sank into the billows of sand Kanana had left his "I am Kanana, son of the sheik of the Beni Sads," replied the Bedouin "My father, I spoke for thy soldiers," replied Kanana, quickly. "My father," said Kanana, "as I came a little way with the caravan "Faster," said Kanana, and the long legs of the white camel swung out a "Faster," said Kanana, touching the camel''s neck with his shepherd''s "Faster!" said Kanana, and the white camel broke into a run, swinging in "Faster!" said Kanana; the camel''s head dropped till his neck lost its Kanana and his camel-driver were left alone. "Thou hast given thy life for Allah and Arabia," Kanana said, "and when id = 39463 author = Hume-Griffith, A. title = Behind the Veil in Persia and Turkish Arabia An Account of an Englishwoman''s Eight Years'' Residence Amongst the Women of the East date = keywords = Arabs; Baghdad; Christians; God; Isphahan; Jews; Kerman; Mission; Mohammedan; Moslem; Mosul; Persia; Yezd; Yezidees; chapter; come; day; english; european; great; house; time; woman summary = The Kerman of to-day is a large walled-in city of about forty thousand I once saw a little girl about seven years old sitting by the roadside the day, and certainly a good cellar is a great boon to a European, one sad day the poor young wife hears that her husband is about to become little women before they had passed out of childhood''s days, ago I heard of a little black boy in Mosul, whose mother, a Moslem The children of Mosul have on the whole a very good time. I was visiting one day in a Moslem house, and the old mother-in-law A short time ago a very sad and sudden death took place in Mosul in A Mosul Moslem woman told me a short time ago that she did Another day I went to visit a little patient of my husband''s in whom id = 15658 author = Zwemer, Amy E. title = Topsy-Turvy Land: Arabia Pictured for Children date = keywords = Arabia; Arabs; Bahrein; Bible; Christ; God; Jesus; Mohammed; Moslem; boy; illustration; topsy summary = This is a book of pictures and stories for big children and small grown-up travel strange in Topsy-turvy Land, even the time of the day is all upside higher place and a better lot than the poor girls and women of Arabia! right across Arabia, and they kept it a long time until the people of produces the finest coffee in the world, but I think the Arabs know how When the hours of prayer come around (the Moslems you know pray five times men who go about in the coffee shops of Arabia to tell stories, just as Will you not pray for western Arabia, and also for the Arab Some little missionaries came to Arabia a few years before any of the coasts of Arabia and the ignorant Arabs learn of other lands and peoples The story of mission work in Arabia is not very long, but it is full of id = 38253 author = nan title = A Description of the Coasts of East Africa and Malabar in the Beginning of the Sixteenth Century date = keywords = Aden; Arabia; Barbosa; Bramans; Calicut; Cambay; Cape; China; Christians; Gentiles; India; Indians; KINGDOM; King; Lisbon; Malabar; Malaca; Moors; Narsinga; Ormuz; Ortelius; Persia; Portugal; Portuguese; Ramusio; Red; Sea; country; good; great; island; moorish summary = time ago on account of the great trade in gold which they carry on country saw such great destruction of their people and ships, The King of Guzarat is a great lord, both in revenue and people, and This King possesses great cities in his kingdom, and especially the river, with a large town called Baticala,[167] of very great trade very large town, peopled by Moors and Gentiles, of the kingdom of said that many men come from all the other kingdoms to this king''s has a Moorish king, a great lord; and in former times this kingdom women relations of the kings and great lords come also to see the king lives, towards the south is a very good town called Cananor.] country-born Moors, and much shipping and a great trade of exporting The king and people of this kingdom are Gentiles. kingdom of Gentiles which has a king who resides in a very great and