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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 9 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 68215 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 85 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 play 5 Mr. 4 illustration 4 golf 4 Taylor 3 good 3 ball 3 Vardon 3 St. 2 like 2 hole 2 golfer 2 course 2 club 2 Tom 2 Royal 2 Professor 2 Golfer 2 Golf 2 England 2 Club 2 Championship 2 Andrews 1 swing 1 stroke 1 player 1 man 1 link 1 game 1 chapter 1 british 1 american 1 Yates 1 Writer 1 Wilks 1 Whipple 1 Westward 1 West 1 United 1 Travis 1 Thomson 1 Tait 1 Susannah 1 States 1 Sproule 1 Spain 1 Skipper 1 Rome 1 Remsen 1 Ray Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 3327 ball 2337 golf 2034 club 1445 game 1427 hole 1324 time 1199 man 1198 stroke 1177 golfer 1161 course 1056 player 914 way 868 day 733 thing 664 swing 655 hand 620 green 600 shot 588 line 546 head 541 match 538 one 516 place 507 year 488 matter 435 case 427 point 423 moment 419 drive 412 play 377 fact 373 yard 367 link 360 side 356 putter 351 foot 340 championship 329 illustration 323 tee 319 round 317 work 317 end 316 spin 315 part 305 idea 304 eye 298 impact 291 nothing 289 mind 286 wrist Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2628 _ 674 Mr. 619 Joel 394 West 364 Vardon 334 St. 308 Braid 280 Golf 232 Professor 205 Andrews 197 Club 168 Taylor 158 Sir 158 March 153 Johnny 145 Remsen 141 America 130 Ball 123 Blair 118 Royal 117 James 116 England 115 Thomson 113 Hillton 112 Championship 109 Tom 106 Harry 92 Outfield 91 London 90 Hoylake 88 John 86 Tait 85 Travis 84 net 83 Yates 82 Clausen 81 Westward 81 Ho 80 Cloud 78 Eustace 77 Park 76 J. 76 Harwell 73 North 72 Whipple 72 PLATE 72 George 71 mashie 71 States 69 France Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8563 it 5703 i 5120 he 2035 they 1999 you 1884 we 1340 him 1039 them 962 me 466 us 433 himself 368 one 189 she 158 themselves 152 itself 113 myself 58 her 30 yourself 28 ourselves 24 ''em 19 mine 15 his 12 ours 12 meself 12 herself 10 yours 9 isself 8 ''s 7 theirs 7 thee 7 oneself 3 ye 2 thyself 2 oo 2 na 2 d''you 2 andrews 1 yourselves 1 yerself 1 y 1 u 1 thy 1 sport 1 poser.--"farmers 1 op''d 1 man''ll 1 imself 1 i''m 1 him!--he 1 hae Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 25492 be 6848 have 3127 do 2133 play 1680 make 1460 say 1243 go 1166 take 1097 come 964 see 892 know 798 give 776 get 750 think 646 put 624 find 492 seem 432 tell 431 win 398 look 370 use 370 keep 368 leave 351 hit 349 drive 338 follow 338 begin 334 let 331 call 326 try 315 show 282 stand 276 lose 275 feel 262 turn 255 carry 253 hold 251 become 238 bring 237 consider 236 golf 235 strike 235 believe 235 ask 230 remember 227 happen 224 run 219 hear 200 start 200 beat Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3976 not 1732 very 1682 so 1645 good 1212 well 1211 more 1194 then 1039 other 1034 up 1016 much 1007 great 945 most 880 little 874 first 818 only 813 now 810 out 718 long 696 right 686 many 676 as 587 too 581 same 558 just 531 old 531 far 523 even 510 never 507 here 507 down 504 again 469 there 448 back 445 short 439 always 436 quite 424 such 412 still 393 all 389 ever 385 on 378 away 353 last 352 own 348 left 323 new 321 bad 317 fine 316 also 313 few Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 569 good 204 most 113 least 106 great 50 fine 49 high 30 bad 29 old 26 slight 24 simple 23 Most 19 long 18 low 17 small 15 near 15 easy 13 big 12 short 11 full 10 strong 10 nice 9 keen 9 early 8 late 8 fast 8 common 7 large 6 hard 6 few 5 true 5 quick 5 happy 5 eld 5 close 4 young 4 plain 4 grand 3 wide 3 thin 3 sure 3 strange 3 straight 3 sound 3 safe 3 mere 3 manif 3 j 3 heavy 3 farth 3 fair Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 741 most 34 well 25 least 3 hard 1 worst 1 near 1 lowest 1 hottest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11 one does not 8 club is not 7 ball is not 7 golf is not 7 one is not 6 _ is _ 5 * do n''t 5 * do not 5 _ was _ 5 golfer is not 4 _ does _ 4 _ hit _ 4 ball does not 4 ball is so 4 game was not 4 golf is good 4 hands are too 4 head is about 4 one is sometimes 4 players do not 4 stroke is so 3 _ did _ 3 _ do _ 3 _ do n''t 3 _ have _ 3 ball being teed 3 ball has not 3 ball is always 3 ball is frequently 3 ball is much 3 ball is practically 3 ball is very 3 club is still 3 club is then 3 club was not 3 golf had not 3 golf has not 3 golf is indeed 3 green is really 3 hand being tight 3 hand is very 3 joel had not 3 joel took up 3 man does not 3 one has not 3 one is conscious 3 one is very 3 player is always 3 stroke is not 3 things are not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 player is not only 1 _ is no use 1 ball are not satisfied 1 ball does not always 1 ball does not really 1 ball has no great 1 ball is not as 1 balls are not willingly 1 balls were not always 1 balls were not numerous 1 club do not necessarily 1 club is not square 1 clubs are not visible 1 clubs has not yet 1 clubs have no voting 1 course had no rough 1 course was not permanently 1 courses were not severe 1 day is not far 1 days was not exorbitant 1 game came not off 1 game did not even 1 game do not often 1 game is not fit 1 game was not enough 1 game was not very 1 games are not proud 1 golf are not alike 1 golf be not so 1 golf had no clubs 1 golf has no possibilities 1 golf has not already 1 golf has not yet 1 golf is no longer 1 golf is no more 1 golf is not agriculture 1 golf is not only 1 golf is not quite 1 golfer has no right 1 golfer has not yet 1 golfer is not dependent 1 golfer is not happy 1 golfer played no more 1 golfers have no rights 1 green is not so 1 greens are not many 1 greens were not quite 1 head is not so 1 hole is not so 1 hole was not there A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 11041 author = Barbour, Ralph Henry title = The Half-Back: A Story of School, Football, and Golf date = keywords = Academy; Blair; Clausen; Cloud; Eustace; Harwell; Hillton; Joel; March; Mr.; Outfield; Professor; Rah; Remsen; Sproule; St.; West; Whipple; Yates summary = lined up for the first time, and Joel was placed at left half in the Whipple, Blair, and West all had their supporters, and Joel learned a "Nevertheless, West," replied the head coach, "if a fellow can play golf friends took their way toward Joel''s room, he told everything to West in One afternoon a week later Outfield West and Joel March were seated on half over the course together, West explaining the game, and Joel After supper West and Clausen came up to Joel''s room, and the four boys West returned to the room he found Joel at the table, head in hands, an the time came for going East both West and Joel were impatient to be on "March, the fellow who kicked the winning goal-from-field in the St. Eustace game two years ago." And while Joel had performed of late no id = 31928 author = Flint, Violet title = A Golfing Idyll; Or, The Skipper''s Round with the Deil On the Links of St. Andrews date = keywords = Deil; Jock; Skipper; good; illustration; like summary = Now Skipper frien'', come tell me true A golfer good, and decent caddie, Jockie was like a bed of sand, But a'' things good maun hae an end, ''Good evening, Skipper,'' says he sprightly, ''Man, a hundred pounds, I hae nae got, A nose like mine, and fine black een, I played weel up a rattlin'' game; Were seen strange forms, like horned apes, My game, I told you had been good, Nine holes to play, eight up I stood. Gone like a flash, I looked and wondered, _One little hole, to save your soul!_ Play up, and man-like save your skin, Old hands, scratch players o'' the game, Good player still, an honest man, He little cared to view the scene. Good play or fickle fortune save me, Of Clootie''s tail, like the broad arrow, and sic-like exclamation. I''m like the chield in Bunyan''s story, I, grim auld pilgrim, in like manner, id = 37394 author = Hutchinson, Horace G. (Horace Gordon) title = Fifty Years of Golf date = keywords = Allan; Andrews; Balfour; Ball; Bobby; Captain; Club; England; Hoylake; Johnny; Laidlay; Molesworth; Mr.; North; Oxford; Royal; St.; Taylor; Vardon; Westward; golf; illustration; play summary = now the Royal Liverpool Golf Club, playing at Hoylake. jabbing the ball up to the hole with the iron clubs and with a great ball, while others, like that great little man Jamie Anderson, then at The first amateur championship, as by law established, was played at St. Andrews, and started for me, as I suppose did most things at that time Johnny Ball really was on his own course and when playing his right I know that I never started out to play a match with Johnny Ball without golfers going about the various links under the leadership of old Mr. Robert Clark, who edited the great book on golf. one day at Hoylake to play a five-ball match, for a fiver a hole, Johnny Ball had won the amateur championship that year at Hoylake, Ball played badly at all, yet he was beaten, I think, by more holes than id = 37136 author = Leach, Henry title = The Happy Golfer Being Some Experiences, Reflections, and a Few Deductions of a Wandering Golfer date = keywords = Andrews; Blackheath; Championship; Club; England; France; John; London; Madrid; Mr.; New; Ouimet; Pau; Ray; Rome; Royal; Spain; St.; States; Taylor; Tom; United; Vardon; american; british; course; game; golf; golfer; good; hole; man; play summary = golf, we like to think of the good men of the old traditions as being No man when at St. Andrews is allowed "to play the short game at the regular golf holes, far smoother courses to play upon and much improved clubs and balls. which he plays the game, Mr. Ball''s golf is strongly individual to knows the truth about a golf stroke as it is played, and that is the man States with greens far superior to those on the old course at St. Andrews the last time the Amateur Championship was played there, those possess a good golf course there, he might say he supposed they did play history that the game was played in Italy before any golf club, except it not for this golf course, on which he plays nearly every day. "You are a golfer, and we of Spain may give you some good golf to play!" id = 41149 author = Vaile, P. A. (Percy Adolphus) title = The Soul of Golf date = keywords = Advanced; Braid; Golf; James; Mr.; Professor; Ralph; Tait; Taylor; Thomson; Travis; Vardon; ball; club summary = left-handed players would use right-hand clubs and play like a to hit before the club head has come anywhere near the ball"--shows to the right--well, the cut on a golf ball in a mashie stroke is in Now, as a matter of fact, by the time the club has arrived at the ball face of the golf club, has struck the ball and sent it on its way to stroke, it stands to reason that after the ball had left his club, his Golfers_ that "in playing for a _pulled ball_ the right wrist turns a golf ball with just as little spin, and as a matter of practical the golf club, the ball will come off it at the same angle at which it possible to drive golf balls by a stroke delivered at the moment of matter of fact the rate of spin of the golf ball at the moment it id = 28107 author = Vardon, Harry title = The Complete Golfer date = keywords = Championship; Mr.; PLATE; Park; Taylor; Tom; ball; chapter; club; course; golf; golfer; good; hole; illustration; play; player; stroke; swing summary = the right hand plays--The manner of hitting the ball--On always being There are different ways of learning to play the great game of golf, play a good game of golf if he goes about it in the right way. fine players drive their best balls with stiff clubs. Good strokes with the brassy--Play as with the driver--The points Good strokes with the brassy--Play as with the driver--The points against full swings with iron clubs--Playing for a low ball against golfers best like to play, because they know that the good shots are (_i_) A ball is "in play" as soon as the player has made a stroke at the If a ball in play move, after the player has grounded his club Except from the tee a player shall not play while his ball is If a player play the opponent''s ball, his side shall lose the hole, id = 37323 author = nan title = Poems on Golf date = keywords = Castalio; Decoration; Golf; Golfer; Innerleven; Pygmalion; Writer; ball; like; link; play summary = The jointed club, whose balls invade the skies, Or round the green the flying ball you chase, The pond''rous club upon the ball descends, Balls, clubs, and men I sing, who first, methinks, Men play the game, the boys the clubs convey, Now, near the hole Sir David plays the odds; And makes him miss his putt; Baird holes the ball; But in!--at five yards, good, Clan holes the ball! Still the old hands at Golf delight to play-Is there an end to putters, clubs, and balls? Than ever man who play''d at Golf before: I''ve seen him play a better game, by Jove; Here, playing a good ball, perhaps it goes Like the glorious game of Golf, boys. So come and play at Golf, boys. So come and play at Golf, boys. So come and play at Golf, boys. In playing at the Golf, boys. id = 38683 author = nan title = Mr. Punch''s Golf Stories date = keywords = Amanda; Aunt; Caddie; Chawley; Enery; Golfer; Mister; PUNCH; Susannah; Wilks; golf; illustration; play summary = There''s some as takes their golf too seerius fer their strength, like words; fer, if yer think of it, a course full of Mister ''Erminius tuppence on the match meself, wif old Washer''s caddy, although not very old Washer, did that tremenjus drive; and ''e''s a man as only plays ''is One Sunday lately ''e came down wif a frend for an ''ole day''s golf. A little success at golf, as I''ve notised, jenerally makes a man wish Let me diskribe to you a rarnd which ''e played the uther day wiv Mister THE GOLFER''S FRIEND AFTER LONG DRIVES--The Tea-Caddy. come and play at ball with you if you like, my dears." "Oh, I''ve played on many worse," said Aunt Susannah, looking round her _Caddie._ "He plays gowf awfu'' like you, sir!"] A caddie who gets playing with your clubs upon the sly; _Young Lady._ "Why?" _Boy._ "_I''ve ''eard ''im play golf!!!_"]