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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 8 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 80462 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 86 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 Ireland 5 Fergus 4 irish 4 Ulster 4 Mac 4 Ailill 3 Mider 3 Medb 3 Ket 3 Finn 3 Etain 3 Cuchulain 3 Conor 3 Book 2 page 2 note 2 come 2 Turenn 2 Slieve 2 Pronounced 2 Oisin 2 Maev 2 Lugh 2 Leinster 2 Laeg 2 King 2 Grania 2 Fraech 2 Flidais 2 Fianna 2 Ferdia 2 Eochaid 2 Egerton 2 Deirdre 2 Connaught 2 Conan 2 Conall 2 CHAPTER 2 Brian 2 Angus 1 time 1 son 1 history 1 god 1 footnote 1 christian 1 Windisch 1 Usnach 1 Usna 1 Ulstermen Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 3102 man 2006 son 1554 time 1384 king 1209 day 904 hand 839 woman 779 place 753 battle 684 head 664 house 660 night 646 land 644 people 634 name 590 way 568 story 565 word 541 spear 540 tale 522 line 521 version 510 sea 505 hero 503 end 501 death 481 side 467 horse 451 gold 450 sword 425 year 423 father 418 warrior 414 wife 408 daughter 403 hill 401 part 397 life 394 thing 382 one 380 hound 375 love 373 child 372 chariot 352 host 348 form 348 country 347 water 342 body 336 world Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1772 Finn 1392 _ 1029 thou 980 Ireland 810 Ailill 804 Cuchulain 662 Fergus 650 King 634 Fianna 501 Cuchulainn 433 Ulster 404 Mac 403 Etain 401 Diarmuid 393 Dermat 326 Grania 316 Eochaid 311 Ferdia 295 Fraech 256 Conor 250 Connaught 249 Medb 248 Conan 244 Mider 231 Erin 230 Irish 230 Cormac 227 Oisin 222 Maev 219 Brian 217 Conall 216 Angus 214 ye 212 Leinster 208 Fena 199 Caoilte 198 Book 181 Lugh 180 Slieve 176 Laeg 166 ford 166 Lir 165 Tara 159 Deirdre 156 Thou 156 CHAPTER 154 Red 143 hath 143 Tain 141 Pronounced Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8651 he 7795 it 6246 they 4963 i 4232 him 3719 them 2904 you 2234 she 2021 me 1896 we 1157 us 1011 her 749 thee 492 himself 245 themselves 200 myself 94 yourself 79 itself 71 one 68 herself 58 ye 51 thyself 45 mine 35 ourselves 18 thy 9 yours 9 theirs 9 his 8 ours 6 whence 4 thou 4 ni 3 o 3 hers 2 yourselves 2 dení 1 oscar:-- 1 it)--by 1 another-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 24053 be 6180 have 5861 say 3497 come 3047 go 2186 do 1914 see 1901 give 1545 make 1242 take 1192 bring 1054 know 870 tell 832 find 776 put 771 ask 763 let 719 hear 643 leave 609 get 605 fall 519 speak 493 call 486 look 467 seem 455 meet 453 follow 444 rise 427 stand 421 fight 381 think 372 send 365 kill 364 set 350 live 348 use 331 hold 322 keep 314 turn 312 slay 301 answer 285 seek 283 begin 282 throw 281 die 276 lie 274 sit 274 bear 271 strike 263 pass Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3998 not 2509 then 1687 great 1551 now 1424 so 1010 out 971 up 875 there 827 long 772 well 757 other 716 good 665 more 627 here 625 away 617 never 588 very 565 down 558 own 558 back 555 first 551 old 530 again 462 as 458 many 426 only 419 same 407 indeed 397 much 385 also 381 little 378 last 365 young 364 irish 356 even 353 thus 352 white 352 on 350 off 348 high 344 ever 311 far 307 red 305 fair 296 whole 296 such 292 all 283 full 267 beautiful 266 together Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 210 good 64 most 61 least 36 old 33 great 30 near 22 early 20 fair 19 eld 19 bad 15 brave 13 high 12 fine 11 noble 9 strong 9 late 8 wise 8 large 8 big 7 swift 7 speak 7 small 6 wish 6 say 5 short 4 new 4 mighty 4 long 4 hard 4 deep 4 crouch 4 comely 3 young 3 sweet 3 rare 3 fierce 3 dear 3 chief 2 wr 2 would 2 weak 2 true 2 thick 2 tall 2 serv 2 said:-- 2 requir 2 quiet 2 nice 2 naught Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 185 most 20 well 5 least 3 near 2 schoolest 2 sayest 2 bravest 1 worst 1 ugliest 1 sharpest 1 hard 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/1/4/7/4/14749/14749-h/14749-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/4/7/4/14749/14749-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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 finn rose up 6 name was etain 5 cuchulain rose up 4 battle went on 4 finn was very 4 ireland were obedient 4 name is not 4 name was regamon 3 ailill was full 3 fianna rose up 3 fianna went out 3 finn asked news 3 finn went back 3 house was never 3 man has never 3 man is not 3 men do not 3 men rose up 3 men went on 3 thou speakest not 2 _ is always 2 ailill are as 2 ailill does not 2 ailill followed close 2 ailill gave blame 2 ailill gave much 2 ailill was whole 2 battle is usually 2 battle were men 2 cuchulain come swiftly 2 cuchulain does not 2 cuchulain had ever 2 cuchulain has indeed 2 cuchulain is not 2 cuchulain is quite 2 cuchulain made answer 2 cuchulain was in 2 cuchulain was tumultuous 2 cuchulain went back 2 cuchulain went forth 2 cuchulain went on 2 cuchulain went thither 2 day are ye 2 day had not 2 fergus brought injury 2 fergus did flidais 2 fergus is far 2 fergus went down 2 fianna are not 2 finn came back Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 day found no wife 2 day had not yet 2 house was no small 2 ireland has not indeed 2 land have no share 2 man has no name 2 man is not far 2 sons come not again 2 tales have no trace 2 tales is not at 2 thou speakest not rightly 2 version is not only 2 version was not considerably 1 battle was not good 1 day was not great 1 fianna made no delay 1 fianna was no sadder 1 fianna were no way 1 fianna were not well 1 finn had no great 1 finn has no armies 1 finn has no mind 1 finn left no one 1 finn made no answer 1 ireland had no great 1 ireland had not more 1 ireland made no answer 1 king is no king 1 king made no delay 1 man said no more 1 man was no other 1 men had no longer 1 name is not demna 1 people gave no heed 1 spear did not so 1 tale tells not here 1 thou speakest not truth 1 ways are not open 1 words is not far A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 14465 author = Gregory, Lady title = Gods and Fighting Men The story of the Tuatha de Danaan and of the Fianna of Ireland, arranged and put into English by Lady Gregory date = keywords = Angus; Bran; CHAPTER; Caoilte; Conan; Danaan; Diarmuid; Druid; Fianna; Finn; Fomor; Goll; Grania; Ireland; King; Lugh; Manannan; Men; Oisin; Osgar; Sidhe; Slieve; Teamhair; Tuatha summary = visit and to bring with them the man they left in the Island of Joy. So they went on towards Ireland till they came to a place called Srub said, "and we are come to find Finn, son of Cumhal, Head of the Fianna, Then Finn turned to his chief men, and he said: "Fianna of Ireland, young men of Ireland, said to his father: "Let me go to help Finn, son you," he said, "all the men of the great world and the Fianna of Ireland So they waited till night came on, and then Finn said: "Let one of you was divider to the King of Ireland, said: "The day Finn came out from king said: "It is a great loss to the men of Ireland the man is that the king''s son to have come," said Finn; "for he will not be satisfied id = 5678 author = Leahy, Arthur Herbert title = Heroic Romances of Ireland, Translated into English Prose and Verse — Volume 1 date = keywords = Ailill; Book; Conor; Cuchulain; Datho; Deirdre; Eochaid; Etain; Ferdia; Fergus; Ireland; Ket; Laeg; Leinster; Mac; Mider; Ulster; Usnach; come; irish; page summary = from Mac O''c, and she came to Mider, and "Let thy foster-son," said let my desire be fulfilled." "It shall be as thou hast said," the king "comes from my love for thee." "''Tis pity," said she, "that thou hast thee," she said, "that I came to this tryst: why comest thou to meet "Thou shalt lose thy lads to-night, Conor," said Senlaech the "It shall never come to pass," said a great fair-haired warrior, "Let Laeg go with thee," said Cuchulain, "that he may learn of the land come to him; and "Do thou go, O Laeg!" said Cuchulain, "to the place Cuchulain hath not come with thee?" "It pleased him not," said Laeg, hand." "We shall give all heed to thy words," said Cuchulain. "O my friend Ferdia!" said Cuchulain, "it was not right for thee to Cuchulain!" said Laeg, "for the men of Erin are coming towards us, and id = 5679 author = Leahy, Arthur Herbert title = Heroic Romances of Ireland, Translated into English Prose and Verse — Volume 2 date = keywords = Ailill; Book; Conall; Connaught; Cuchulain; Egerton; Eocho; Fergus; Flidais; Fraech; Maev; Medb; Mider; Pronounced; Tain; Ulster summary = "Not for boasting to-day are ye come!" said Maev; the men for the chess And said Ailill to Fraech, "Shall thy harpmen play?" "Let them play," And said Ailill, "In truth for the play was thy thought, and to thee "I will give thee what price thou dost name," said Fraech, "and now let And, "''Tis told me," said Ailill, "that Fraech hath won My daughter," said Ailill, "a ring last year I gave thee, is''t here Then find it," said Ailill, "the ring must be brought, or thy soul from Not thus shalt thou fly," said the king, "to thy maid let the quest of "''Tis ill luck that awaits thee," said Conall, "thy quest shall be Eocho said, "this day as tribute shall to Croghan come the cows." as thou sayest," said Eocho; "moreover, they shall come to thee this "Not hard to tell thee," said she] "let men march out from thy palace id = 5680 author = Leahy, Arthur Herbert title = Heroic Romances of Ireland, Translated into English Prose and Verse — Complete date = keywords = Ailill; Book; Conall; Connaught; Conor; Cuchulain; Deirdre; Egerton; Eochaid; Etain; Ferdia; Fergus; Flidais; Ford; Fraech; Ireland; Ket; Laeg; Leinster; Mac; Maev; Medb; Mider; Pronounced; Tis; Ulster; Windisch; come; irish; page summary = from Mac O''c, and she came to Mider, and "Let thy foster-son," said let my desire be fulfilled." "It shall be as thou hast said," the king "comes from my love for thee." "''Tis pity," said she, "that thou hast thee," she said, "that I came to this tryst: why comest thou to meet "It shall never come to pass," said a great fair-haired warrior, "Let Laeg go with thee," said Cuchulain, "that he may learn of the land come to him; and "Do thou go, O Laeg!" said Cuchulain, "to the place Cuchulain hath not come with thee?" "It pleased him not," said Laeg, hand." "We shall give all heed to thy words," said Cuchulain. Cuchulain!" said Laeg, "for the men of Erin are coming towards us, and And said Ailill to Fraech, "Shall thy harpmen play?" "Let them play," as thou sayest," said Eocho; "moreover, they shall come to thee this id = 8109 author = O''Grady, Standish title = Early Bardic Literature, Ireland. date = keywords = Cuculain; Danan; Ireland; Tuátha; christian; god; history; irish; note; son; time summary = cist of which the ancient traditional history is recorded; in Ireland other subjects, the author of a work on Irish history has to labour The pre-Christian period of Irish history presents difficulties from of the Irish bardic literature, having in his ears this century-lasting the immense mass of bardic literature which treats of the Irish gods age demands upon the subject of antique Irish history--an exact time of the Incarnation, and its characters are the leading Irish kings heroes around whom that cycle revolves have, in the history of Ireland, cycles, the history of the Irish gods, and the gradual growth of that objective truths; but as theogony, and the history of the Irish gods, When the Irish bards began to elaborate a general history of their ancient literature without seeing clearly the genesis of the Irish gods, ethnic bards had rationalised the history of the early gods; the Tuátha id = 14749 author = Rolleston, T. W. (Thomas William) title = The High Deeds of Finn and other Bardic Romances of Ancient Ireland date = keywords = Brian; Conor; Cormac; Dún; Erinn; Etain; Ethne; Fergus; Fianna; Finn; Ireland; Iubdan; Ket; King; Lugh; Mananan; Oisín; Tara; Turenn; Ulster; irish summary = a good lord you were with," said Patrick, "Finn, son of Cumhal?" And Now Bóv the Red came ere long to hear of it, and he said, "If Lir So Brian, son of Turenn, rose up and said to Lugh: "It is to us thou "Thou wert a fool," said the King of Iorroway, "to have come on such a the High King consent to let thee go," said Midir, "wilt thou then "My lord and chief," he said, "I am Finn, son of Cumhal, and the day what manner of men they be." The son of the King of the Greeks said, Then the King of Sorca smiled, and he said, "Behold thy men, Finn." So he went before the King and said, "If thou art willing, Cormac, I Then Socht said, "Hear ye, O men of Erinn and Cormac the King! Cormac, it is said, was the third man in Ireland who heard of the id = 14391 author = nan title = The Cattle-Raid of Cualnge (Tain Bo Cualnge) : An Old Irish Prose-Epic date = keywords = Ailill; Ath; Conchobar; Cuchulainn; Diad; Emain; Fergus; Ireland; Mac; Medb; Roth; Ulstermen; note summary = ''I think of the host to-night,'' said Cuchulainn to his father. said Cuchulainn to Loeg, ''that we may know the number of the host.'' is the man who would have done the deed,'' said Fergus, ''Cuchulainn; ''Then Cuchulainn heard this; he comes to Conchobar and said to him: "A man in a chariot is coming to you," said the watchman in Emain ''I see two chariots coming towards us,'' said Loeg; ''a great dark ''Welcome, O friend Fergus,'' said Cuchulainn; ''if a fish comes come to-morrow,'' said Cuchulainn, ''till he is between Ochaine and ''Let some one come from you against me,'' said Cuchulainn at Ath Da ''One man coming towards us,'' said Loeg to Cuchulainn. ''One man coming towards us,'' said Loeg to Cuchulainn. ''One chariot coming hither towards us, O Cuchulainn!'' said Loeg. ''Welcome your coming, O my friend, O Fergus,'' said Cuchulainn. must be done in the battle,'' said Cuchulainn to his charioteer, id = 38041 author = nan title = Old Celtic Romances date = keywords = Angus; Brian; CHAPTER; Conan; Dacker; Dedannans; Dermat; Erin; Fena; Finn; Gilla; Grania; Ireland; Island; Lir; Luga; Mac; Maildun; Midac; Naisi; O''Dyna; Oisin; Oscar; Palace; Slieve; Turenn; Usna; footnote summary = from that time forth, as long as they abode on the Western Sea. So they continued at the point of Irros Domnann, till they had fulfilled "That deed would doubtless bring great evil on us," said the king, "for waves, till the sons of Turenn landed near the palace of the king of "Thy ransom is a good one, O king," said Brian; "but I am a near-hearted "Who is this thou art talking to, my son?" said the king. Dermat shouted to him to hold his hand and not slay the king''s son; and more far-seeing man than thou art, O king, we have come to ask thee to Finn and his people saw them afar off coming towards the hill with great And when they had come to the ford, Dermat said, "Finn will doubtless Then he came to Dermat and said, "Peace is better for thee: art thou