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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 2 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 151071 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 74 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 french 2 St. 2 Renaissance 2 France 2 England 1 xii 1 romanesque 1 italian 1 illustration 1 gothic 1 german 1 century 1 building 1 XIII 1 VII 1 Troyes 1 Tours 1 Suger 1 Saint 1 Rouen 1 Rheims 1 Poitiers 1 Plantagenet 1 Pierre 1 Philippe 1 Paul 1 Paris 1 Palace 1 Notre 1 Normandy 1 Midi 1 Middle 1 Michel 1 Martin 1 Mans 1 Lyons 1 Louis 1 Les 1 Laurens 1 Laon 1 John 1 Jeanne 1 Jean 1 Italy 1 Histoire 1 Henry 1 Guillaume 1 Gothic 1 God 1 Flamboyant Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1396 church 1194 century 758 cathedral 629 window 547 building 486 choir 459 tower 445 p. 441 work 434 wall 431 art 425 nave 360 year 358 vault 356 part 351 architecture 342 time 341 day 315 city 308 stone 298 chapel 293 transept 284 architect 282 side 276 man 266 arch 264 king 255 bishop 243 pier 240 school 238 aisle 224 period 221 illustration 214 son 205 roof 198 sculpture 197 feature 185 capital 180 monument 178 tomb 177 bay 175 glass 169 line 160 house 160 example 159 end 157 plan 156 use 156 rib 155 style Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 4867 _ 1937 St. 1689 de 834 France 789 Paris 552 Gothic 527 la 458 Cathedral 376 et 347 Louis 280 vol 270 le 256 Le 256 La 250 Bishop 228 Dame 226 Notre 224 H. 221 du 220 des 215 Renaissance 208 Jean 194 Rouen 192 Jeanne 189 Rheims 187 Les 171 II 170 Henry 169 E. 167 Chartres 166 God 164 Pierre 161 XIII 160 England 155 Normandy 153 M. 150 Denis 146 Norman 146 Charles 145 Abbé 143 Archéologique 140 Congrès 135 Cluny 135 Bernard 131 Burgundy 130 John 130 Histoire 128 Romanesque 123 XII 123 Tours Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 1798 it 1152 he 621 they 335 them 330 we 285 him 200 she 166 i 123 you 99 us 96 himself 91 her 80 itself 67 one 57 me 52 themselves 25 herself 5 yourself 5 ourselves 5 je 4 thee 4 ours 4 hers 4 au 3 myself 2 theirs 2 his 1 épreuves 1 église!= 1 yours 1 oneself 1 mine Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 9934 be 2191 have 554 build 511 make 301 give 300 call 287 do 285 say 285 begin 281 come 250 see 241 find 231 stand 212 take 205 rise 196 show 191 become 189 know 186 use 184 carry 162 set 160 die 156 bear 154 go 150 pass 147 add 129 write 129 hold 125 erect 124 appear 123 employ 120 think 115 cover 114 belong 111 form 109 finish 107 place 102 follow 100 remain 100 lead 99 carve 98 lie 97 leave 97 bring 96 seem 94 found 89 work 89 open 89 fall 87 design Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 778 not 612 gothic 481 great 472 first 403 more 377 so 373 most 362 early 324 other 319 same 311 good 304 only 287 such 282 well 273 new 267 very 265 many 254 french 233 here 230 romanesque 229 up 222 then 211 now 201 as 183 large 183 also 182 often 182 long 181 little 178 own 174 small 174 out 173 much 171 high 164 later 161 old 148 never 143 too 139 even 135 western 135 present 131 less 131 central 131 ancient 129 few 123 late 121 almost 120 still 112 rich 112 last Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 126 good 70 most 48 great 46 early 34 old 24 fine 21 least 20 high 13 rich 9 late 9 large 7 long 7 e 6 young 6 noble 6 grand 6 fair 5 pure 5 low 4 strong 4 small 4 slight 4 lovely 4 able 4 Most 3 wide 3 true 3 simple 3 plain 3 brave 2 wise 2 supreme 2 sincere 2 sad 2 s'' 2 proud 2 near 2 narrow 2 full 2 eld 2 dark 2 clever 2 c'' 2 busy 1 weighty 1 warm 1 veri 1 topmost 1 thin 1 subtle Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 303 most 22 well 1 persecutest 1 oldest 1 least 1 l''art 1 greatest 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?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 time went on 3 walls are usually 2 _ see _ 2 architecture did not 2 architecture is history 2 building is often 2 cathedral is more 2 cathedral is st. 2 cathedral was not 2 cathedral was originally 2 century added side 2 century rose window 2 choir is late 2 choir was not 2 church was partly 2 france are more 2 nave is xii 2 tower was due 2 towers were frequently 2 windows are comparatively 2 windows are long 2 windows are round 2 windows do not 2 windows set up 1 _ are dante 1 _ are full 1 _ be strong 1 _ built romanesque 1 _ came only 1 _ dies iræ 1 _ dies iræ_--sound 1 _ gives details 1 _ is dull 1 _ is not 1 _ is now 1 _ took place 1 _ was later 1 _ was poles 1 _ was so 1 architecture be better 1 architecture came direct 1 architecture had quite 1 architecture is as 1 architecture is gothic 1 architecture is impossible 1 architecture is more 1 architecture is nothing 1 architecture is so 1 architecture is strongly 1 architecture made cistercian Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ is not colombe 1 cathedral had not yet 1 cathedral is no exception 1 cathedral is not only 1 cathedrals have no setting 1 centuries were not so 1 choir are not parallel 1 choir make no pretense 1 church has no transept 1 churches do not usually 1 churches were not widely 1 day is no church 1 day was not yet 1 france is no exception 1 france is no more 1 gothic are not so 1 nave is not sufficiently 1 towers are not unfrequently 1 vault is not altogether 1 vault was not accidental 1 walls are not only 1 walls make no pretense 1 windows are not forceful A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 41687 author = O''Reilly, Elizabeth Boyle title = How France Built Her Cathedrals: A Study in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries date = keywords = Abbot; Abbé; Archéologique; Bernard; Bishop; Bourges; Bulletin; Burgundy; Cathedral; Champagne; Charles; Chartres; Cluny; Congrès; Dame; Denis; Dijon; England; Europe; Flamboyant; France; God; Gothic; Guillaume; Henry; Histoire; Jean; Jeanne; John; Laon; Laurens; Les; Louis; Lyons; Mans; Martin; Michel; Middle; Midi; Normandy; Notre; Paris; Paul; Philippe; Pierre; Plantagenet; Poitiers; Renaissance; Rheims; Rouen; Saint; St.; Suger; Tours; Troyes; VII; XIII; french; romanesque; xii summary = of Paris show early trials of Gothic vaulting--St. Germain-des-Prés, St. Martin-des-Champs, St. Pierre-de-Montmartre--St. Louis and his friend, Angels"--Martyrdom of Rheims in the World War. Cathedral of Amiens, the Parthenon of Gothic art--Bishop Evrard de XIIIand XIV-century windows of Troyes Cathedral--St. Urbain''s church bishops--Early Christian martyrs of Rome''s chief city in Gaul--St. Martin d''Ainay''s abbatial dedicated in 1107--Cathedral choir late XII Cathedral of Le Mans--XII-century nave built by notable prelates--Bishop south aisle originally a separate Romanesque church, XII century--Good church has fluted pilasters (XII century)--Autun Cathedral''s Romanesque stateliest church in Burgundy--Its Romanesque nave and Gothic choir 1160 as Ile-de-France Gothic--Its Lady chapel built by Bishop Pierre had learned its imagery from Rheims, that German Norbert, revered of St. Bernard, had helped France in the days when Gothic art was in formation, Gothic vaulting of the two abbey churches of Caen were XII-century of Primary Gothic art in France, the transept arm built by the crusading id = 33837 author = Smith, T. Roger (Thomas Roger) title = Architecture: Gothic and Renaissance date = keywords = Architect; CATHEDRAL; England; English; FIG; France; Italy; Palace; Renaissance; St.; building; century; french; german; gothic; illustration; italian summary = windows, doors, and other features in Gothic buildings. the military and domestic buildings of the Gothic period (Fig. 7). secular building which exists of Gothic architecture. the planning of English Gothic buildings of all periods. The walls of Gothic buildings are generally of stone; brick being the great Gothic church, except the general use of the pointed arch. States of the Church), in which the best Gothic buildings are to be The constructive arches in Italian Gothic buildings are, as a rule, a building material in Italy during the Gothic period, than in other The design of Italian Gothic buildings presents many peculiarities, Gothic building; with the result that if the great governing feature exception, with all large Gothic buildings), the architect, while buildings designed and built in the new style, possess great interest. many of these churches and other buildings, a beautiful ornament,