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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 5 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 42489 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 87 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 illustration 2 Trot 2 Sky 2 Rosalie 2 Pinkies 2 Island 2 Ghisizzle 2 Button 2 Bright 2 Boolooroo 2 Blue 2 Bill 1 wing 1 white 1 tail 1 long 1 like 1 fly 1 flight 1 feather 1 everglade 1 british 1 boy 1 black 1 bird 1 Tarantula 1 Stubbs 1 Robin 1 Queen 1 Quatty 1 Pork 1 Mr. 1 Lieutenant 1 Lathrop 1 Jack 1 Harry 1 Golden 1 Frank 1 England 1 Eagle 1 Dove 1 Dick 1 Country 1 City 1 Chops 1 Chapin 1 Carrier 1 Billy 1 Ben 1 Bellman Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 648 boy 430 bird 402 time 374 wing 341 man 308 way 277 flight 254 umbrella 247 girl 223 head 218 people 215 room 194 place 193 eye 189 hand 176 thing 175 air 173 side 172 water 171 island 163 country 159 sailor 159 palace 159 day 157 one 151 leg 145 foot 136 end 134 illustration 133 friend 129 sky 125 minute 124 parrot 119 soldier 114 house 110 year 109 night 108 door 107 part 106 moment 102 course 100 body 96 tail 95 tree 94 ground 92 life 92 face 90 word 90 voice 90 stranger Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 879 Trot 652 Bill 467 Frank 462 Boolooroo 458 _ 436 Button 382 Bright 270 Pinkies 196 Ben 165 Harry 164 Billy 163 Rosalie 163 Lathrop 159 Ghisizzle 155 Blue 152 Island 148 Country 143 Ghip 142 City 138 Sky 135 Queen 117 Magic 112 Tourmaline 106 Quatty 104 Umbrella 102 Fog 100 Blueskins 97 Bank 93 Pink 91 Witch 84 Earth 80 Royal 77 Great 76 Golden 75 King 74 Eagle 74 Captain 70 CHAPTER 69 Coralie 68 Tiggle 68 Princesses 67 Chops 64 Stubbs 63 Indigo 61 exclaimed 61 II 60 Pork 58 Majesty 57 Princess 53 Book Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2488 it 2205 i 2156 he 1957 you 1883 they 1023 we 896 them 760 she 657 him 485 me 343 us 267 her 108 himself 97 themselves 67 ''em 58 one 48 myself 38 itself 37 ''s 30 herself 23 jus 17 yourself 12 yours 10 ourselves 10 em 5 ours 3 mine 2 yourselves 2 ob 2 i''d 1 you''re 1 yer 1 ye''self 1 wireless 1 theirs 1 sho 1 oneself 1 of.--what 1 his 1 hers 1 ben--"that 1 ah Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 8295 be 2808 have 1301 do 1151 say 645 go 629 see 535 make 505 know 491 get 463 come 448 find 409 take 328 ask 286 look 277 think 266 seem 247 reply 243 give 223 tell 187 fly 185 cry 183 let 175 begin 173 try 167 keep 167 hear 164 run 160 turn 159 hold 157 call 155 want 143 stand 143 follow 139 patch 138 leave 132 carry 131 put 126 answer 123 live 122 sit 112 decide 109 return 108 like 98 remark 98 become 97 watch 97 lie 96 fall 93 set 93 add Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1914 not 649 so 636 then 518 up 406 long 402 now 387 as 377 very 362 here 359 little 358 out 326 other 315 more 315 good 300 blue 264 much 252 back 238 first 235 again 229 only 227 down 227 away 226 all 221 old 214 great 206 once 200 just 199 big 198 well 198 there 178 too 172 even 171 never 167 soon 161 bright 156 pink 154 far 152 right 152 off 144 small 144 most 135 pretty 133 white 131 ever 129 few 126 sure 121 however 119 same 117 young 117 on Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 66 good 41 most 29 least 14 Most 12 large 10 great 9 bad 8 common 6 big 5 strong 5 near 5 high 5 full 4 topmost 4 queer 4 mere 4 light 3 small 3 slight 3 old 3 low 3 long 3 keen 3 happy 3 fine 2 strange 2 safe 2 poor 2 mean 2 likeli 2 late 2 hard 2 furth 2 fascinating 2 cross 2 close 1 young 1 wild 1 sweet 1 smart 1 remote 1 rare 1 minute 1 manif 1 lively 1 j 1 hot 1 hoatzin 1 fast 1 extreme Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 103 most 5 least 4 well 1 mist,--the 1 lightest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 bill was n''t 4 boolooroo is not 4 boy was not 4 bright did not 4 bright held fast 3 _ is _ 3 boys did not 3 flight is slow 2 _ are _ 2 bill came up 2 bill do n''t 2 bill is also 2 bill looked cross 2 bill looked grave 2 bill told trot 2 bill was alert 2 bill was all 2 bill was also 2 bill was delighted 2 bill was meek 2 bill was much 2 bill was so 2 bill was terribly 2 bill were fortunate 2 bill were up 2 bird seemed much 2 boolooroo did not 2 boolooroo had already 2 boolooroo had breakfast 2 boolooroo has already 2 boolooroo is able 2 boolooroo is furious 2 boolooroo is likely 2 boolooroo is very 2 boolooroo looked around 2 boolooroo said not 2 boolooroo seemed quite 2 boolooroo seemed rather 2 boolooroo was as 2 boolooroo was quite 2 boolooroo was terrified 2 boolooroo went out 2 boy came up 2 boy was bitterly 2 boy was glad 2 boys were ready 2 bright called out 2 bright come safe 2 bright had already 2 bright had now Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 bill made no such 2 boolooroo had no friends 2 boolooroo has no right 2 boolooroo is not very 2 boy was not much 2 boy was not quite 2 bright had no desire 2 girl had not yet 2 man has not only 2 men being no taller 2 pinkies made no objection 1 ben was not fastidious 1 boys did not shortly 1 boys had no fear 1 boys were no match 1 boys were not long 1 flight does not always 1 flight is no longer 1 frank had no means 1 frank was not sanguine 1 frank was not satisfied 1 time had no eyes A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 39159 author = Baum, L. Frank (Lyman Frank) title = Sky Island Being the Further Exciting Adventures of Trot and Cap''n Bill After Their Visit to the Sea Fairies date = keywords = Bill; Blue; Boolooroo; Bright; Button; City; Ghisizzle; Island; Pinkies; Rosalie; Sky; Trot; illustration summary = "Dear me," said Trot; "you''re a long way from home, then." "But it''s big enough for mother and me, an'' for Cap''n Bill," said Trot. "Guess I''ll call you Button-Bright," said Trot, sighing. "There!" said Trot, triumphantly, "didn''t I tell you, Button-Bright, after Button-Bright and Trot had both gone to bed the old sailor went Button-Bright and Trot both thought Cap''n Bill''s invention very clever. places, Button-Bright at the right of Trot, and then the boy hooked the "I want to go to Sky Island," said Button-Bright to the umbrella, using "It won''t last long, Button-Bright," said Cap''n Bill, consolingly. Trot and Cap''n Bill and Button-Bright into a small room and advised them Trot and Button-Bright and Cap''n Bill were all We''ll take good care of Cap''n Bill and Trot and Button-Bright Trot and Button-Bright, with Cap''n Bill and Rosalie the Witch, went to id = 4356 author = Baum, L. Frank (Lyman Frank) title = Sky Island Being the further exciting adventures of Trot and Cap''n Bill after their visit to the sea fairies date = keywords = Bill; Blue; Boolooroo; Bright; Button; Country; Ghisizzle; Island; Pinkies; Queen; Rosalie; Sky; Trot summary = "Dear me," said Trot, "you''re a long way from home, then." "But it''s big enough for mother and me, an'' for Cap''n Bill," said Trot. "Guess I''ll call you Button-Bright," said Trot, sighing. Button-Bright and Trot both thought Cap''n Bill''s invention very clever. places, Button-Bright at the right of Trot, and then the boy hooked the back and took her seat, Button-Bright said, "I want to go to Trot''s "I want to go to Sky Island," said Button-Bright to the umbrella, using "It won''t last long, Button-Bright," said Cap''n Bill consolingly. Trot and Cap''n Bill and Button-Bright into a small room and advised Trot and Button-Bright and Cap''n Bill were all We''ll take good care of Cap''n Bill and Trot and Button-Bright. Frog rode Trot and her parrot, besides Rosalie, Button-Bright, Cap''n Trot and Button-Bright, with Cap''n Bill and Rosalie the Witch, went to id = 45991 author = Goldfrap, John Henry title = The Boy Aviators on Secret Service; Or, Working with Wireless date = keywords = Aviators; Barnes; Bellman; Ben; Billy; Carrier; Chapin; Chops; Dove; Eagle; Frank; Golden; Harry; Lathrop; Lieutenant; Pork; Quatty; Stubbs; Tarantula; boy; everglade summary = "It does sound like a good deal of money," replied Frank, "but if you bulk, "these young men are Frank and Harry Chester, the _Boy Aviators_, "Well," said Frank, "as you know, Billy, we gave Ben one of the rubies "That''s just like you, Frank Chester," burst out the other boy angrily, "Here they come," whispered Frank to the boys, whom he knew were there; "Come on, boys,--volunteers to get supper," cried Frank, after the group after Frank and Harry had rowed off to the sloop, Lathrop and Billy than Frank had believed, and at old grizzled Ben Stubbs sleeping, like "Well, come on, boys," cried Frank at last, "There''s no use stopping "Come on, boys, we''ve got to hurry," shouted Ben, and followed by the "Are you all ready?" whispered Harry to Frank, as both boys distinctly "What are you thinking of, Frank, old boy?" asked Harry as the destroyer id = 33775 author = Leslie, Madeline title = Little Robins Learning to Fly date = keywords = Dick; Jack; Mr.; Robin summary = [Illustration: LITTLE ROBINS LEARNING TO FLY.] near the pear tree, he saw a large robin flying back and forth from it, I found our robin in a pear tree near Mr. Bacon''s farm, feeding a whole nest full of birds." "I want to hear more about birds helping each other," said the boy. "Dick is the oldest, and must try his wings first," said Mr. Robin, "Come, my brave Jack," said his mother; "you shall show us how easily "I will leave you," said Mrs. Robin, "for I see your father cannot "Come, Dick," said Mrs. Robin, in an encouraging tone, after she had "Now," said Mrs. Robin to Jack, "I must go back to your sisters--will Mrs. Robin said nothing, but after flying to the top of the tree to see "Just see how pretty those act," said Fred, pointing to Jack and Katy. "Fly up a few times into this bough," said Jack. id = 45086 author = Pycraft, W. P. (William Plane) title = Birds in Flight date = keywords = England; bird; black; british; feather; flight; fly; illustration; like; long; tail; white; wing summary = How should one describe the wing of a bird, as one sees it in flight? or "flight-feathers." The rest of the wing, and the body itself, is place of the series of quill-feathers found in the wing of the bird. His white body, pointed tail, and black quill-feathers birds fly--Flight with burdens--Experiments on the sizes of the wing movements of the bird''s wing during flight. time the bird could remain on the wing. only to be made, by birds having wings conspicuously coloured. bird flying low over the ground, with a white rump, and black wings, shrike; a very handsome bird, with pointed wings, long tail, and low The wings, in flight, are long and pointed, and marked with During flight the wings are also black, but flight feathers can be seen, and presently a large wing is covering The wings of all differ conspicuously from those of other birds in the