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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 63179 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 68 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 german 2 England 1 war 1 troop 1 transport 1 power 1 operation 1 french 1 fleet 1 european 1 Winkler 1 Willberg 1 Warnow 1 Uhlan 1 Triple 1 State 1 Russia 1 Olga 1 North 1 Nissew 1 Morocco 1 Majesty 1 Lieutenant 1 Italy 1 Hildegarde 1 Great 1 Golden 1 George 1 Fritz 1 France 1 Footnote 1 Europe 1 English 1 Empire 1 Butterflies 1 Austria 1 America 1 Alliance Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 630 war 487 officer 450 man 404 army 371 time 328 day 257 power 243 nation 237 thing 237 duty 233 position 231 troop 230 force 222 condition 216 people 204 hand 201 money 199 life 199 fleet 198 regiment 194 interest 193 policy 175 strength 174 way 169 order 167 country 153 course 152 peace 150 state 148 view 148 lieutenant 146 word 146 development 145 world 142 point 140 question 139 year 139 operation 134 idea 128 sea 127 enemy 126 preparation 126 part 126 father 124 matter 124 attack 122 place 122 artillery 120 service 120 case Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 372 _ 318 George 233 England 225 Germany 199 State 169 Hildegarde 143 France 120 | 118 Winkler 118 States 113 von 109 Willberg 76 Russia 72 Fritz 69 Empire 68 English 67 Lieutenant 65 Italy 58 Majesty 57 Nissew 53 Europe 52 Olga 51 War 51 Golden 50 German 50 Butterflies 49 Great 48 Warnow 48 North 45 Austria 44 Footnote 44 America 43 Government 43 General 39 Alliance 38 Morocco 37 Triple 36 Uhlan 36 East 34 Prussia 34 Powers 34 Emperor 34 -| 32 Africa 31 United 31 Berlin 31 Baron 30 Society 30 Germans 28 Power Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 1867 it 1667 he 1360 i 1216 you 943 we 770 they 589 him 561 she 363 them 348 me 339 us 206 her 129 himself 88 one 88 itself 86 themselves 49 herself 40 myself 36 ourselves 17 yourself 7 ours 5 yours 3 oneself 3 mine 2 theirs 1 writes?--''he 1 u 1 thyself 1 rightly--"you 1 ''s Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 7634 be 2605 have 969 do 459 make 420 say 352 know 307 take 292 go 280 give 247 see 216 get 206 come 176 think 175 tell 155 show 147 look 138 ask 135 find 133 keep 128 become 123 pay 121 carry 119 bring 113 want 113 consider 109 feel 105 stand 101 try 100 require 99 regard 95 speak 92 understand 92 put 90 win 89 fight 89 exist 88 leave 86 wish 86 seem 86 follow 85 live 84 lead 83 lose 82 remain 82 increase 77 turn 77 mean 75 act 73 hear 72 call Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2048 not 604 only 582 so 464 great 462 more 360 political 360 other 355 then 305 very 283 military 258 german 258 first 255 up 254 now 253 well 248 long 239 quite 236 most 233 such 231 out 221 good 208 also 205 own 195 even 179 therefore 175 never 175 far 172 thus 171 much 165 large 165 as 164 again 163 possible 162 high 162 always 155 necessary 153 still 144 same 143 national 138 really 138 last 137 whole 133 once 132 just 131 present 122 often 118 strong 118 old 118 little 117 important Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 71 least 61 good 59 high 49 great 32 most 14 bad 9 slight 7 simple 7 late 7 large 7 deep 6 young 6 strong 6 short 6 faint 5 old 5 full 4 wide 4 small 4 noble 4 dear 3 rare 3 less 3 happy 3 Most 2 rich 2 mighty 2 keen 2 innermost 2 heavy 2 fine 2 few 2 clear 2 bold 1 wise 1 weighty 1 true 1 sure 1 stupid 1 slow 1 sincere 1 sharp 1 severe 1 pure 1 polite 1 pleasant 1 new 1 near 1 manif 1 lofty Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 204 most 9 least 6 well 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 george did not 4 people do not 4 war is not 3 people were really 2 _ is _ 2 fleet is ready 2 george was embarrassed 2 george was really 2 george was somewhat 2 man does not 2 men are afraid 2 men were not 2 nation is not 2 officers are not 2 officers did not 2 people has always 2 thing is very 2 things were very 1 _ are better 1 _ do not 1 _ does _ 1 _ have never 1 _ is as 1 _ is clearly 1 _ know nothing 1 armies are even 1 armies are large 1 armies do not 1 army are thereby 1 army be possible 1 army is aware 1 army is capable 1 army is fortunate 1 army is no 1 army is quite 1 army is worth 1 army was not 1 condition does not 1 condition is impossible 1 conditions are equal 1 conditions are quite 1 conditions are so 1 conditions are thereby 1 conditions are unavoidable 1 conditions are very 1 conditions is also 1 conditions is extremely 1 conditions were favourable 1 conditions were quite 1 day are not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 war is not merely 1 army is no despicable 1 army is no longer 1 days does not merely 1 george did not even 1 george had no chance 1 man does not only 1 man has no means 1 men were not rare 1 money had no other 1 money was not always 1 nation has no permanent 1 nation is not only 1 nation was no longer 1 officer has no money 1 people are no longer 1 people have no mercy 1 people is not exclusively 1 state is not physical 1 things were not so 1 troops are not sufficiently 1 war are not identical 1 war had not yet 1 war is not always A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 46755 author = Baudissin, Wolf Ernst Hugo Emil, Graf von title = Life in a German Crack Regiment date = keywords = Butterflies; Fritz; George; Golden; Hildegarde; Lieutenant; Majesty; Nissew; Olga; Uhlan; Warnow; Willberg; Winkler summary = "Lieutenant Winkler," continued the colonel, "a very great honour officers'' quarters were splendid, and George gave a long account of George went up to his room, but he lay awake a long time, and thought officers was von Nissew, a one-year service man, who on account of George did not know how Willberg had felt about his coming into the The count talked to George for a long time, and the latter saw "I want you to know my father, baroness," George went on: "you would officer at the table, an old captain, read the young lieutenant such "I really do not want the money," George said every time; "on the "One thing worries me," said George: "I do not know if I have enough "What do you know about the matter, Non-Commissioned Officer von "When is your father coming?" George himself did not know, and id = 11352 author = Bernhardi, Friedrich von title = Germany and the Next War date = keywords = Alliance; America; Austria; Empire; England; English; Europe; Footnote; France; Great; Italy; Morocco; North; Russia; State; Triple; european; french; german; power; war summary = Empire and the revived spiritual power--Rise of the great States The land forces of England--The military power of Germany and The value of war for the political and moral development of mankind has struggle will be decisive of Germany''s whole future as State and nation. through a Seven Years'' War for our position as a World Power, if we gain possibility of war is required to give the national character that a great danger, not so much from the possibility of a war with England nationality pure and maintain their position as political powers. English colonial war, which would engage England''s fleets in far distant the war, and the want of German imports would be a great stimulus, and The political and national development of the German people has always, Germany has great national and historical duties of policy and culture generally, the training of the superior officers for the great war id = 27244 author = Edelsheim, Franz, Freiherr von title = Operations Upon the Sea: A Study date = keywords = England; fleet; german; operation; transport; troop summary = mind the land operations in expeditions over-sea. intercourse it is possible to transport our large troop forces in difficulty arises in the fact that all sea and land fighting forces that with a reverse at sea the landing operations could not be carried After successful landings it may be necessary to place the transport fleet and its escort in command of the chief of the land troops. loading transports and landing maneuvers for the heavy artillery and land, a complete plan is necessary for operations over the sea which will be to ship as many troops as the transports will carry. of the transport fleet is possible if the command of the sea is operations of the landed troops must be conducted wholly as a war on strength of the sea and land fighting forces of the two opponents, and because of the small forces necessary to transport over the sea to