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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 57091 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 8 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 Korea 5 King 4 man 4 Seoul 4 Mr. 4 China 3 japanese 3 Prince 3 Majesty 3 Japan 2 chinese 2 Minister 2 Court 1 |toward 1 |the 1 water 1 time 1 soil 1 sidenote 1 rice 1 pound 1 people 1 large 1 land 1 korean 1 king 1 illustration 1 house 1 head 1 good 1 foot 1 field 1 european 1 day 1 crop 1 corean 1 chapter 1 american 1 acre 1 Yung 1 Yellow 1 Year 1 Yang 1 Wang 1 United 1 UMMZ 1 Tong 1 Toh 1 Taijo 1 States Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1508 man 1044 time 951 day 870 people 602 way 562 water 554 year 547 place 538 field 530 foot 513 woman 505 house 469 land 468 country 433 side 433 part 433 hand 395 head 394 thing 378 night 373 rice 373 one 358 mile 348 crop 321 island 288 father 287 eye 283 child 279 acre 271 soil 267 hill 264 number 262 ground 257 word 253 soldier 249 family 245 body 244 pound 244 face 243 boy 242 life 239 case 237 village 237 friend 236 son 233 end 228 home 225 other 223 street 221 work Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2577 | 1912 _ 626 Mr. 519 Japan 503 Korea 351 Japanese 348 Seoul 345 King 327 China 255 Fig 207 Koreans 199 ze 192 Kit 184 Helen 182 Pak 157 Loo 155 Corea 149 Yung 149 KU 147 Emperor 147 Captain 145 Prince 143 Cho 135 General 131 Maxwell 129 Government 123 Minister 121 Chinese 120 sen 119 Corean 109 Korean 101 East 97 Kim 97 E 93 Majesty 90 Yi 90 NE 90 Footnote 89 Reid 87 Chief 86 Han 85 Coreans 83 Governor 82 choo 80 Tong 78 Choi 76 Court 75 N 74 July 74 Dr. Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4445 he 4017 it 2714 they 2538 i 1990 we 1630 him 1540 them 1355 you 984 she 691 me 600 us 475 her 325 himself 183 themselves 114 one 84 itself 62 myself 56 herself 30 ourselves 23 yourself 18 ya 12 ours 10 ''s 9 his 6 mine 5 theirs 4 yours 4 sho 3 yá 2 s| 2 oneself 2 ''em 1 yourselves 1 wa 1 tympanum 1 thus-- 1 thirtieth 1 thee 1 poh 1 o´tayoong 1 o 1 na 1 i´ndeetáoong 1 inn 1 hers 1 hah 1 ha 1 befoul Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 19615 be 5663 have 1483 do 1441 see 1382 make 1175 go 1174 come 1056 say 1012 take 736 give 573 find 521 know 463 look 435 use 418 bring 413 call 407 seem 399 carry 396 leave 361 pass 360 tell 354 become 352 get 339 follow 339 ask 323 stand 315 think 305 show 287 send 279 keep 266 hear 256 reach 254 grow 251 hold 247 appear 241 return 239 live 236 begin 226 put 217 turn 217 sit 215 enter 209 fall 208 let 203 wear 202 meet 199 observe 192 place 190 lie 188 cover Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2570 not 1189 so 976 more 914 very 831 great 823 then 796 up 790 other 679 only 651 out 641 little 635 well 612 many 589 much 577 old 571 long 563 large 549 now 532 good 490 high 485 first 476 japanese 473 most 472 as 467 down 464 small 442 even 428 such 393 here 384 however 374 also 372 too 363 again 356 same 337 away 323 never 305 still 305 about 300 just 295 korean 294 off 290 thus 280 there 278 once 278 last 278 far 273 young 273 few 270 low 264 nearly Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 116 most 114 good 81 least 56 great 48 high 40 large 25 slight 23 low 23 Most 19 bad 18 old 16 early 15 deep 14 near 12 small 12 fine 11 rich 10 late 6 strong 6 full 5 simple 5 poor 5 heavy 5 eld 5 cold 5 bright 4 wild 4 smart 4 narrow 4 choice 3 wide 3 soft 3 safe 3 common 3 cheap 2 young 2 tall 2 strange 2 rare 2 plain 2 noble 2 minute 2 long 2 harsh 2 grave 2 dense 2 crude 2 close 2 bold 2 bitter Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 357 most 14 well 14 least 2 near 1 lest 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 pg@aldarondo.net Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 men were busy 4 water is not 3 _ is also 3 _ was _ 3 women are not 2 _ had now 2 _ see _ 2 _ was not 2 country was not 2 day was not 2 fields are again 2 fields are not 2 fields is very 2 fields were nearly 2 house was not 2 japanese were not 2 korea was still 2 man called kim 2 man stood forth 2 man was bolt 2 man was not 2 men got together 2 people are willing 2 people did not 2 rice is nearly 2 time is here 2 water was too 2 woman came in 1 _ are infinitely 1 _ are negatives 1 _ are round 1 _ are sympatric 1 _ are turrets 1 _ became openly 1 _ being also 1 _ being water 1 _ do _ 1 _ do n''t 1 _ got off 1 _ is _ 1 _ is briefer 1 _ is equivalent 1 _ is invariably 1 _ is seldom 1 _ pass away 1 _ saw _ 1 _ see observations 1 _ seem generally 1 _ takes place 1 _ was commonly Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 water is not available 1 countries is not only 1 country was not level 1 day was not so 1 fields are not especially 1 head was not altogether 1 house was not only 1 japanese did not at 1 japanese had not yet 1 japanese were not content 1 korea are not more 1 lands are not altogether 1 man had no children 1 man had no thoughts 1 man made no effort 1 man made no reply 1 man was no acquaintance 1 man was not more 1 man was not so 1 one had no less 1 one had no special 1 one is not familiar 1 people are not content 1 places are not more 1 rice is not at 1 thing has no name 1 thing is not very 1 time had no part 1 time was not japan 1 water is not yet 1 water was not deep 1 women are not handsome 1 women have no very 1 years give no promise A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 55539 author = Allen, Horace Newton title = Korean Tales Being a collection of stories translated from the Korean folk lore, together with introductory chapters descriptive of Korea date = keywords = Hah; Kil; King; Korea; Majesty; Nahl; Noo; Pang; Ryung; Toh; Tong; Yang; man summary = In ancient times there lived an old gray-haired man by the river''s this little wine-shop; the old man had apparently always been there, were assured that the old man was thoroughly good, and that his wine One day the news flashed around the neighborhood that the old man''s As soon as their joy had become somewhat natural, the old man carefully Poor Pang Noo did his inspection work with a heavy heart as time wore the bird king to be this man''s concubine." Whereupon the wife grew wife came into the court, and began to abuse the hare-lipped man for The great man''s son came here to rest them to come and care for the old man when she could look after him no Kil Tong came as called, and on seeing him the hag bowed and said: Kil Tong went by night to see his father, who thought him a spirit, id = 34810 author = Barnes, Annie Maria title = The Red Miriok date = keywords = Chefoo; Choi; Clarence; Dorothy; Helen; Kit; Mallard; Mr.; Reid summary = "I think I know what is the matter with Mr. Kit-ze," said Mr. Reid, as "Yes, even the red _miriok_ to get Mr. Kit-ze," declared Mallard. "Is your sampan ready, Mr. Kit-ze?" Mr. Reid now asked. my friend," and he took the hat from Helen and held it toward Mr. Kit-ze. time had reached Han-Kang, where they found Mr. Kit-ze and the sampan, "Oh," said Helen, "if Mr. Kit-ze could only know!" Even as she spoke, Thus Mr. Kit-ze, coming in sight of the sampan, saw Clarence standing in "Dear Mr. Kit-ze," said Helen, taking his hand, and at that moment he Helen was sure that better feelings were stirring at the heart of Mr. Kit-ze on these occasions, for she could see how his eyes softened and "The _miriok_?" said Mr. Kit-ze softly and looking at her with eyes "Oh, Mr. Kit-ze," said Helen, "I----" id = 29051 author = Hall, Basil title = Account of a Voyage of Discovery to the West Coast of Corea, and the Great Loo-Choo Island date = keywords = Alceste; August; Captain; Chief; China; Choo; Clifford; Corea; East; English; Footnote; Island; July; King; Loo; Lyra; Maxwell; Mr.; Mádera; NNE; Napakiang; October; Prince; Sea; September; Yellow; sidenote; |the; |toward summary = Ships--Alceste and Lyra proceed farther in Shore--A Chief of high Rank of the Yellow Sea, the West Coast of Corea, and the Great Loo-choo Enter the Japan Sea--Sulphur Island--Volcano--See the Great Loo-Choo Enter the Japan Sea--Sulphur Island--Volcano--See the Great Loo-Choo and the first chief took his place on Captain Maxwell''s left hand, the quick as they generally are, was in the cabin to-day for some time; Mr. Clifford was getting from him the Loo-choo words for sour, sweet, salt, Great Loo-choo, where there is a deep bight, a small island was observed GULF OF PE-CHE-LEE, THE WEST COAST OF COREA, THE GREAT LOO-CHOO ISLAND, NOTICE TO ACCOMPANY THE GENERAL CHART OF THE GREAT LOO-CHOO ISLAND, AND NOTICE TO ACCOMPANY THE GENERAL CHART OF THE GREAT LOO-CHOO ISLAND, AND island, was some miles north of the ship at the time of observation, the OBSERVATIONS MADE AT NAPAKIANG OBSERVATORY, GREAT LOO-CHOO ISLAND. id = 5350 author = King, F. H. (Franklin Hiram) title = Farmers of Forty Centuries; Or, Permanent Agriculture in China, Korea, and Japan date = keywords = Canton; China; Fig; Japan; Korea; Manchuria; Shanghai; Shantung; States; United; acre; chinese; crop; field; foot; japanese; land; large; pound; rice; soil; water summary = Japan 56 per cent of the cultivated fields, 11,000 square miles, is The average area of the rice field in Japan is less than five square grave lands had become nearly naked soil, as seen in Fig. 27 where a Fields which had matured two crops of rice during the long summer, applied to rice, Fig. 45 showing a field as seen in Japan. lands is largely used upon the rice fields, more than sixteen inches inches of water applied to the rice fields of the three main islands a closer view than Fig. 27 of the farmer watering his little field The basal food crop of the people of China, Korea and Japan is rice, of water rice on the plains land at 44 bushels per acre, and that of cultivated land produces a crop of water rice each year and 7.96 per id = 13128 author = Landor, Arnold Henry Savage title = Corea or Cho-sen: The Land of the Morning Calm date = keywords = China; Cho; Court; Gate; Japan; King; Korai; Majesty; Mr.; Prince; Seoul; Year; chapter; chinese; corean; european; good; head; house; illustration; japanese; man; people; time summary = residents--The word "Corea"--A glance at Corean history--Cho-sen. residents--The word "Corea"--A glance at Corean history--Cho-sen. Corean sedan-chairs are somewhat too short for the long-legged foreigner, Going along at a good pace I reached the half-way house, a The Woman of Cho-sen--Her clothes--Her ways--Her looks--Her The Woman of Cho-sen--Her clothes--Her ways--Her looks--Her the man of Cho-sen and his clothes, to describe in a general way to you woman has a right to open and enter any door of a Corean house when she beats the man, for the Corean woman can have a temper at times. was surrounded by a large crowd of natives, when a good-natured old man When the Coreans eat in their own houses, the men of the family take King of Cho-sen, he set his heart upon having a house built in the It is a great mistake to suppose that the good-natured King of Cho-sen, id = 13368 author = McKenzie, Fred A. (Fred Arthur) title = Korea''s Fight for Freedom date = keywords = Cabinet; China; Christians; Court; Emperor; General; Government; Independence; Ito; Japan; Kim; King; Korea; Koreans; Minister; Mr.; Pyeng; Queen; Seoul; american; japanese; man summary = They attempted to turn the people of Korea into Japanese--an by the Japanese troops, by the students, and some 800 Korean soldiers, "We are not ready to fight China yet," said the Japanese Foreign Minister King was to return to his palace and Japan was to keep her people in Korea fleet, and the Japanese soldiers had seized the Korean Emperor''s palace. an American missionary and certain Koreans against the conduct of Japanese Japanese people treat the Koreans and will make their acts all best-informed Koreans realize that Japan and Japanese influence Koreans to the left and Japanese to the right of the Emperor, with the Korea in the Korean language, and it is edited by a Japanese. land as possible from the Koreans and hand it over to Japanese. enough in the old days; since the Japanese acquired full power in Korea it with the Korean people, is that the Japanese, indifferent to us, id = 12048 author = Pike, H. Lee M. (Henry Lee Mitchell) title = Our Little Korean Cousin date = keywords = Ken; Pak; Taijo; Wang; Yung; king; korean summary = Yung Pak was the very queer name of a queer little boy who lived in a One thing about Yung Pak, though, was just like little boys everywhere. When Yung Pak grew to be a man the long hair was knotted up on top of Yung Pak''s own sleeping-room was a dainty affair, with its paper walls, servants and priests, had gone into the temple, Yung Pak and Kim Yong With Yung Pak''s father was a strange gentleman, a young man with a Yung Pak made a very low bow, for all Korean boys are early taught to be On this account Yung Pak''s tutor had orders to give to the lad each day, "Let me get the man something to eat," said Yung Pak as the monk seated "Do you think," said Yung Pak, "that the old kings were any better than Wang Ken was able to tell Yung Pak much about country life, for, like id = 34949 author = Webb, Robert G. title = Some Reptiles and Amphibians from Korea date = keywords = Cheju; Korea; National; Seoul; UMMZ summary = specimens from Cheju Do (28, 32, 32, 32, 37 and 46 in snout-vent length) _Rana amurensis coreana_ at all localities where the species was taken small frogs; largest female and male having respective snout-vent _Rana amurensis coreana_, Shannon, Herpetologica, 12:38, March 6, hillside; no specimens of _Rana amurensis coreana_ were taken there. The largest male among our specimens measured 65 in snout-vent length The third specimen, a male (UMMZ 113442, snout-vent length, _Remarks._--On April 14, two females (57 and 45 in snout-vent length, _Remarks._--The specimen from the Central National Forest was captured Our largest specimen, a male having 154 ventrals and 68 _Remarks._--The specimen from Cheju Do was captured on September 9 in Our largest specimen, a male (UMMZ 113454) having a total length of 1488 Two males from the Central National Forest, having total lengths of 1105 A small collection of reptiles from central Korea. id = 51002 author = Yi, Yuk title = Korean Folk Tales: Imps, Ghosts and Faries date = keywords = Chang; Charan; God; Governor; King; Korea; Majesty; Minister; Prince; Province; Seoul; day; man summary = Chang O-sa used to tell a story of his father, who said that one day During this time a young man one day called on him, and while fell ill this very day and died, and after some time came to life It is said that he went out for a walk one day while his wife Han saw him he turned, and said, "Good old chap, you come all this Said he, "You cast me off and took another man, therefore I have come The master said, "Show this young man the way to his apartments and One day his wife said to him, "Would you like to enter into the inner Some three years passed when one day there came once more a servant Said he, "In my dream I went to a certain region, a place of great fear "The old man said, ''She is a wonderful woman.