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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 3 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 26774 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 95 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 thou 1 scene 1 enter 1 drink 1 THOR 1 Skomager 1 PEER 1 Odin 1 Nille 1 NILLE 1 NANNA 1 Master 1 MONTANUS 1 Latin 1 LOKE 1 LAWYER 1 Jeppe 1 Jakob 1 JESPER 1 JERONIMUS 1 JEPPE 1 JACOB 1 Hill 1 HOTHER 1 HERMAN 1 HENRICH 1 GESKE 1 Erik 1 Burgomaster 1 BALDER Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 236 man 167 time 130 wife 129 scene 125 thing 109 day 107 people 99 one 90 year 87 life 86 hand 83 burgomaster 82 peasant 78 spear 78 house 77 head 72 lordship 71 word 68 son 67 death 66 way 63 something 63 earth 57 god 57 devil 54 nothing 52 fellow 51 eye 50 friend 49 husband 49 honor 49 father 49 daughter 48 woman 48 money 48 heart 47 tear 46 deacon 45 law 43 arm 41 servant 41 place 40 world 40 work 39 glass 38 table 38 health 36 mother 36 love 35 tinker Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 229 Jeppe 206 JEPPE 198 MONTANUS 177 thou 153 HOTHER 144 HERMAN 140 HENRICH 137 BALDER 106 NANNA 104 JACOB 89 Hother 86 Balder 79 Nanna 70 LOKE 70 GESKE 69 Nille 68 PEER 67 NILLE 67 Jacob 64 lord 63 JESPER 61 Henrich 60 Odin 58 JERONIMUS 55 FIRST 52 Master 50 Thou 45 Latin 45 Holberg 45 Burgomaster 44 THOR 43 LAWYER 41 Jakob 40 Hill 38 Herman 36 Peer 36 Mr. 34 LIEUTENANT 32 Eric 30 heaven 30 ANTONIUS 29 Montanus 29 Erik 28 Monsieur 27 God 26 Enter 26 Berg 26 ACT 25 Rasmus 25 Copenhagen Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2294 i 1364 you 1055 he 981 it 565 me 399 him 249 we 241 they 148 she 112 them 101 us 96 himself 90 myself 83 her 75 thee 31 one 18 yourself 13 themselves 13 ourselves 13 herself 8 thyself 8 ''s 6 itself 4 yours 2 yourselves 1 understand?--where 1 theirs 1 ours 1 i.--there 1 i''m 1 hoe;theim 1 hid''st 1 buttons,--what Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 3173 be 1152 have 709 do 275 get 265 see 247 know 244 say 244 come 221 go 199 make 175 give 164 take 160 think 157 hear 123 let 118 drink 101 talk 99 call 96 hang 79 tell 79 look 79 find 78 want 76 stand 75 believe 72 become 70 die 68 speak 63 put 60 wish 58 learn 56 listen 55 happen 52 feel 51 sit 50 understand 50 turn 50 live 50 keep 50 fall 49 ask 48 enter 47 lie 45 run 45 bring 40 swear 40 help 39 use 39 mean 39 hold Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1022 not 257 so 229 now 226 here 222 good 213 then 197 more 168 again 167 up 151 well 138 only 120 out 118 too 115 as 112 much 111 other 104 never 98 such 94 just 93 enough 92 first 80 back 79 long 71 away 69 own 68 same 67 old 66 still 64 great 61 very 60 little 59 once 57 down 56 dear 55 true 55 there 52 right 51 whole 50 second 50 poor 49 in 48 off 48 most 46 on 44 soon 43 all 42 ever 42 dead 41 many 41 high Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 29 good 15 least 13 great 11 most 8 high 5 bad 3 small 2 young 2 wish 2 strong 2 stay 2 noble 2 late 2 extreme 2 eld 2 deep 2 brave 1 wise 1 temp 1 sweet 1 statesmanlike 1 sound 1 soft 1 sigh 1 show 1 short 1 shedd 1 seek 1 safe 1 proud 1 offend 1 near 1 lovely 1 intei 1 hop 1 hold 1 hid 1 heavy 1 feel 1 fair 1 easy 1 doubt 1 do 1 dire 1 delay 1 dear 1 dar 1 damn''d 1 choice 1 betray Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 37 most 7 well 2 tremblest 1 fright''nest 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?" ------------------------------------------------- 1 ccx074@coventry.ac.uk Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 man called jeppe 3 people do not 2 balder is dead 2 jeppe comes in 2 lord has only 2 man does n''t 2 man is willing 1 balder had not 1 burgomaster had only 1 burgomaster has just 1 burgomaster is not 1 burgomaster is really 1 burgomaster want mustard 1 day is market 1 day was such 1 day were over 1 hand is philosophy 1 house has ever 1 house stand abrahams 1 jeppe ''s not 1 jeppe is finally 1 jeppe is not 1 life thought such 1 life was not 1 lord be so 1 lord has always 1 lord has heretofore 1 lord is not 1 man be foolish 1 man has stuff 1 man hear things 1 man is right 1 man talk latin 1 man were not 1 men did not 1 men get such 1 men go about 1 one being aware 1 one does n''t 1 one finds there 1 one is eager 1 one is enough 1 one is more 1 one is overwhelmed 1 one made fun 1 peasants are always 1 people come in 1 people come together 1 people have always 1 people make way Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 jeppe is no fool 2 wife had no arms 1 burgomaster was no goose 1 jeppe ''s not as 1 jeppe is not quite 1 life was not averse 1 lord is not awake 1 man were not content 1 people have no convictions 1 things are not impossible 1 wives have no master A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 13879 author = Ewald, Johannes title = The Death of Balder date = keywords = BALDER; HOTHER; LOKE; NANNA; Odin; THOR; thou summary = Both are armed--THOR with his hammer, and BALDER with spear and sword. Now, Balder, hear my word, and fly from Nanna! Shall wonder at thy grief, and pity Balder! What holds thee here, where thou canst hope for nothing? Know, son of Odin, thou whom reason, friendship, But then, most likely thou wilt pity Balder, Yes, thou noble youth, and love thee! Shall I mistrust thee, then--shall I, thy Hother? Thou lovest then thy half-god. HOTHER (will rush towards BALDER, but NANNA makes every effort to prevent Canst thou wish Nanna to abandon Hother? Believe thy Balder, Nanna! press thou thy breast unto this bosom, "Behold," I cried, "thy spear, thou crafty Rota! Wert thou a god, I''d still have none but Hother! And dip thy spear in blood, thou son of Odin! BALDER, HOTHER, NANNA. BALDER, HOTHER, NANNA. NANNA, daughter of Gevar, beloved by Hother, and by Balder, son of Odin, id = 42022 author = Holberg, Ludvig title = Jeppe on the Hill; Or, The Transformed Peasant: A Comedy in Five Acts date = keywords = Erik; Hill; Jakob; Jeppe; Master; Nille; Skomager; drink summary = and my good old Jeppe dressed down until he became quite awake again. =Jeppe= (cautiously)--Have you put Master Erik away, Nille? Jeppe drinks; why, I never got so many poundings in the ten years I was =Jeppe=--Good morning, Jakob Skomager. =Jakob= (comes with a glass and drinks Jeppe''s health). =Jakob=--Here''s the drink, Jeppe, but the money first. =Jeppe=--I s''pose you can trust me while I drink, as the old saying goes. =Jakob=--We don''t care for any old sayings here, Jeppe! =Jeppe=--The best thing about whiskey is that it gives a man such spirit. that I am Jeppe on the Hill; I certainly know that I am a poor peasant, grandfather, Jeppe on the Hill, my wife''s name is Nille, her switch, =Jeppe=--Is the wicked Nille not my wife? =Jeppe=--You know very well yourselves what wine I am used to drinking in =Jeppe=--Ah, my gracious judge, I should gladly be hanged, if that lawyer id = 5749 author = Holberg, Ludvig title = Comedies by Holberg : Jeppe of the Hill, The Political Tinker, Erasmus Montanus date = keywords = Burgomaster; GESKE; HENRICH; HERMAN; JACOB; JEPPE; JERONIMUS; JESPER; LAWYER; Latin; MONTANUS; NILLE; PEER; enter; scene summary = Holberg made the vehicle of profound delineation of character Dr. Georg Brandes says of Jeppe, "All that we should like to know of a man to let his patrons force themselves to drink more than is good and Jeppe bursts into tears.] Oh, can a man hear things like that in Why, Eric, such things happen every day: people throw away learned man, who spends his days and nights in reading political until they think of it, we shall wait a long time. The good ladies must not let the time seem long. Now, you shall see, good people, if a man who had been twenty good man preaches fine sermons here in the village and can talk Do you know, Peer, my son is coming home to-day or We shall hear to-day what the deacon is good for. Come, let us go--you may be sure, my good