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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 111768 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 89 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 Versailles 2 Taverney 2 St. 2 Paris 2 France 2 CHAPTER 1 man 1 good 1 Zamore 1 Rousseau 1 Rohan 1 Quote 1 Philippe 1 Philip 1 Page 1 Oliva 1 Nicole 1 Motte 1 Monsieur 1 Master 1 Manoël 1 Madame 1 Louis 1 Lorenza 1 Lady 1 Labrie 1 Jeanne 1 Jean 1 Jacques 1 Gilbert 1 Fenix 1 Duke 1 Dubarry 1 Crosne 1 Countess 1 Count 1 Chon 1 Choiseul 1 Charny 1 Cagliostro 1 Boehmer 1 Beausire 1 Bearn 1 Baron 1 Balsamo 1 Andrée 1 Andrea Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 770 queen 619 man 468 king 389 madame 384 lady 378 hand 335 time 291 one 282 door 261 day 259 majesty 248 sir 246 room 245 woman 234 nothing 215 eye 210 house 196 word 195 cardinal 182 name 158 gentleman 157 thing 150 sire 149 head 146 voice 143 carriage 143 brother 142 way 142 friend 141 year 141 life 140 necklace 137 night 136 horse 136 arm 133 people 126 heart 125 monseigneur 125 money 124 father 119 window 118 place 116 princess 112 hour 108 order 107 sister 106 franc 105 letter 103 book 100 honor Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 746 M. 715 de 301 Madame 275 Jeanne 268 Gilbert 241 Charny 213 Beausire 194 Taverney 176 Oliva 170 Philippe 170 Cagliostro 170 Andrée 158 la 141 Balsamo 137 Rohan 129 Andrea 122 Paris 119 Motte 114 Page 101 CHAPTER 98 France 95 Jean 93 Versailles 93 St. 92 _ 92 Lorenza 89 Dubarry 87 Chon 86 Count 83 Louis 82 Nicole 77 Boehmer 76 Manoël 65 Marie 63 Monsieur 60 Crosne 58 Antoinette 56 Rue 52 heaven 50 Valois 50 God 49 Richelieu 49 Lady 49 Dieu 47 Mademoiselle 46 Philip 46 Comte 45 Rousseau 44 Reteau 43 Countess Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4766 you 4573 i 2817 he 2612 it 1807 she 1678 me 1003 him 763 her 683 they 635 we 425 them 279 us 181 himself 127 yourself 120 herself 107 myself 68 one 33 themselves 26 itself 17 ourselves 17 mine 14 yours 8 hers 5 his 3 thee 2 ours 1 ye 1 wrong---- 1 widow 1 whence 1 silence?--you 1 oneself Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 8005 be 3277 have 2188 say 1797 do 847 see 763 go 705 know 647 come 556 take 504 make 467 think 381 tell 380 give 373 ask 341 look 340 cry 321 speak 300 reply 282 hear 273 let 271 leave 256 wish 219 call 212 want 212 find 211 turn 200 return 198 believe 188 open 186 get 181 seem 181 begin 179 love 168 send 161 feel 157 continue 156 pass 155 follow 153 wait 150 keep 140 bring 139 pay 137 enter 134 show 134 draw 126 understand 123 run 121 remain 121 live 120 stop Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2550 not 756 so 718 then 415 more 407 only 370 out 365 here 359 up 329 now 286 good 271 well 256 other 256 much 249 old 221 young 214 very 214 never 209 first 206 again 202 away 198 little 191 too 185 great 180 long 168 last 165 still 164 there 162 as 156 off 148 back 147 down 144 just 140 even 137 most 134 same 133 poor 132 also 130 own 129 such 126 however 123 in 119 soon 118 countess 115 on 114 therefore 111 alone 110 dear 108 once 107 no 107 new Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 64 least 35 good 15 most 15 great 6 near 6 fine 5 high 5 bad 4 j 3 sweet 3 pure 3 old 3 low 3 dark 2 small 2 slight 2 sharp 2 rich 2 noble 2 mean 2 late 2 eld 2 dear 2 cheap 2 base 1 witty 1 wise 1 thick 1 sure 1 sunburst 1 strong 1 stern 1 southw 1 short 1 racy 1 quick 1 poor 1 lovely 1 loud 1 long 1 large 1 holy 1 hard 1 greedy 1 furth 1 easy 1 choice 1 bright 1 brave 1 Most Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 122 most 11 least 4 well Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.net Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/0/1/2/20122/20122-h/20122-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/0/1/2/20122/20122-h.zip Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 gilbert did not 4 jeanne did not 4 one does not 3 majesty did not 3 men are brothers 3 nothing is more 3 queen did not 2 cardinal did not 2 cardinal turned pale 2 charny did not 2 door opened again 2 gilbert had not 2 gilbert was not 2 jeanne had not 2 jeanne looked surprised 2 jeanne was silent 2 king does not 2 lady did not 2 majesty does not 2 majesty has already 2 majesty has not 2 majesty is asleep 2 men are equal 2 philippe did not 2 queen does not 2 queen is not 2 queen looks back 2 time has not 1 beausire had money 1 beausire has not 1 beausire looked fierce 1 beausire turned pale 1 beausire was frightened 1 beausire was much 1 beausire was not 1 beausire went down 1 beausire went on 1 cardinal does not 1 cardinal is here 1 cardinal looked as 1 cardinal said nothing 1 cardinal took off 1 cardinal turned white 1 cardinal was best 1 cardinal was full 1 cardinal was now 1 cardinal was thoughtful 1 cardinal was too 1 charny had difficulty 1 charny had just Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 beausire was not there 1 gilbert is no longer 1 gilbert thought no woman 1 gilbert was not enough 1 gilbert was not so 1 house was not fit 1 jeanne had no intention 1 jeanne had not before 1 kings is no longer 1 majesty has not yet 1 majesty is not prepared 1 man are not here 1 man has no right 1 oliva was not at 1 one has no robe 1 philippe made no reply 1 queen had no sooner 1 queen has no friend 1 room had no external 1 time was no less 1 women are no enemies 1 words were no longer A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 20122 author = Dumas, Alexandre title = The Queen''s Necklace date = keywords = Andrée; Beausire; Boehmer; CHAPTER; Cagliostro; Charny; Count; Crosne; France; Jeanne; Madame; Manoël; Monsieur; Motte; Oliva; Paris; Philippe; Rohan; St.; Taverney; Versailles summary = "Yes," said Count Haga, "long live his majesty the King of France. "And you have seen Queen Cleopatra?" said Madame Dubarry. "Sire," said Madame de Misery, while the queen took her letters and Madame de Misery then left the room, and the king and queen remained approached the queen, and said, "Look around you, madame." "Monsieur," said the queen, "I wish you to know that you have not fired queen looked displeased, "Pray, madame," said she, turning to the "The ladies of the portrait?" said Jeanne, who, now knowing the queen, "Madame," said the queen, "have the goodness to tell the king exactly The queen looked at him, and said, "It is too hot here; Madame de la "Madame," said she to the queen, "did your majesty appoint this hour to "No," cried the king; "the queen does not want this money; she said to id = 45822 author = Dumas, Alexandre title = Balsamo, the Magician; or, The Memoirs of a Physician date = keywords = Andrea; Balsamo; Baron; Bearn; CHAPTER; Choiseul; Chon; Countess; Dubarry; Duke; Fenix; France; Gilbert; Jacques; Jean; Labrie; Lady; Lorenza; Louis; Master; Nicole; Page; Paris; Philip; Quote; Rousseau; St.; Taverney; Versailles; Zamore; good; man summary = hours, you will come and call me, Acharat," said the old man in a "Lady," said a timid voice at hand, "I am here, and I may be some help "Lord forbid I should think the ill of your house that you speak," said philosopher," said Balsamo, "he ought to preserve his liking for you, "I ask your highness to let me dwell obscure," said the baron, with a "I am too proud, lady," said Gilbert, smiling loftily. "Hush, brother," said Chon; "he knows the man who wounded you. "Tell us, countess," said Louis, settling down in an easy chair, like "I saw a man spring on my brother," said Chon, "force him to draw his "Allow me," said Jean, as the ladies took seats; "the countess must not "Know, young man, that he is an unhappy creature." With a sigh he said "I know but to read and write," said Gilbert, shaking his head.