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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 11 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 20538 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 91 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 illustration 4 Mr. 3 monkey 2 little 2 Uncle 2 Monkey 2 Jacko 1 word 1 time 1 speech 1 sound 1 simian 1 sidenote 1 shepherd 1 man 1 life 1 jungle 1 great 1 cage 1 author 1 Wiggily 1 Tum 1 Tricky 1 Toby 1 Teddy 1 Susie 1 Stuart 1 Pug 1 Prince 1 Phil 1 Patricia 1 Park 1 Nellie 1 Mrs. 1 Miss 1 Minnie 1 Mickie 1 Martin 1 Mappo 1 Major 1 Lee 1 LESLIE 1 Kinkytail 1 Jumpo 1 Janet 1 Jack 1 Gum 1 Elsie 1 Donald 1 Dago Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1083 monkey 526 time 522 man 498 sound 414 boy 382 dog 289 house 283 day 282 trick 282 hand 273 way 267 thing 265 animal 248 speech 238 cage 236 child 235 tree 233 one 227 tail 201 something 196 circus 188 illustration 187 trouble 186 brother 183 pet 175 head 159 box 157 room 151 mother 149 water 147 word 142 place 139 wood 137 voice 133 organ 131 life 127 girl 122 tiger 122 friend 120 father 119 cocoanut 118 top 117 face 116 ship 115 story 115 door 114 window 113 night 112 side 109 end Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 835 _ 565 Jacko 559 Mappo 502 Mr. 477 Jumpo 383 Janet 363 Teddy 331 Major 307 Mrs. 280 Martin 257 Monkey 254 Uncle 186 Curlytops 185 Toby 183 Crow 176 Ted 158 Jack 157 Top 115 Tip 112 Tum 112 Phil 105 Trouble 98 Kinkytail 89 exclaimed 81 Skyrocket 73 Donald 68 CHAPTER 65 Tricky 61 Wiggily 61 Patricia 55 Nip 54 fox 54 Elsie 53 Snuff 53 Miss 53 Jimmy 49 Stuart 49 Prince 49 Minnie 49 Aunt 43 Jolly 41 Robin 40 c. 39 Watson 39 Johnnie 39 Green 37 Nellie 36 tiger 36 Susie 36 Speech Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3907 i 3825 he 2737 it 1869 you 1429 they 1138 him 937 we 852 she 724 me 676 them 268 her 189 us 175 himself 61 ''s 49 myself 44 ''em 34 themselves 30 one 28 itself 21 yourself 18 em 17 herself 6 yours 5 mine 5 his 4 ourselves 3 ours 3 hers 2 york= 2 theirs 1 yourselves 1 outline.= 1 hour,--she Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 8137 be 3179 have 2023 do 1284 go 1229 say 831 see 827 get 768 come 743 make 557 take 519 look 517 know 509 think 448 cry 407 ask 377 give 357 find 334 tell 328 run 310 want 284 call 280 eat 275 hear 239 try 229 let 222 begin 219 put 210 keep 209 seem 187 play 179 leave 178 hold 169 turn 169 catch 161 happen 160 answer 158 use 149 like 148 sit 147 show 144 stand 138 jump 130 start 127 help 125 mean 123 speak 118 laugh 118 guess 114 understand 114 bring Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2452 not 932 so 825 little 774 up 749 then 526 very 517 out 449 now 441 other 393 down 388 more 378 just 358 away 342 good 341 as 315 old 307 back 293 much 264 same 264 only 261 here 260 long 254 never 245 well 241 great 241 all 235 there 233 too 233 first 231 soon 227 again 224 off 219 on 219 big 215 many 174 right 169 over 167 in 157 once 155 home 153 always 137 fast 135 next 135 enough 133 ever 132 such 130 even 129 white 127 of 124 black Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 54 good 38 least 27 most 26 high 10 slight 10 low 9 great 9 bad 7 near 4 old 4 early 3 nice 3 large 3 cut 3 Most 2 strong 2 soft 2 jolly 2 hard 1 young 1 wicked 1 topmost 1 tall 1 sweet 1 sorry 1 smart 1 small 1 safe 1 rough 1 rich 1 ragged 1 quick 1 queer 1 plump 1 plain 1 loud 1 late 1 kind 1 j 1 homely 1 happy 1 free 1 fine 1 fast 1 farth 1 faint 1 easy 1 deep 1 curly 1 clever Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 88 most 8 least 5 well 1 youngest 1 manliest 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/1/3/9/8/13980/13980-h/13980-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/3/9/8/13980/13980-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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 16 mappo did not 9 mappo was not 8 monkeys do not 6 man did not 5 jacko did n''t 5 monkeys are very 4 janet did not 4 mappo made up 4 monkey was very 3 boys did not 3 dog did not 3 jacko did not 3 janet were so 3 jumpo did n''t 3 jumpo was so 3 mappo was very 3 monkey did not 3 monkey was not 3 monkeys have favourite 3 speech is not 2 _ is _ 2 _ said _ 2 boy went on 2 boys did n''t 2 boys do not 2 children do n''t 2 children were safe 2 jacko comes home 2 jacko was just 2 jacko was not 2 jumpo comes back 2 jumpo got ready 2 jumpo was very 2 jumpo were glad 2 major goes south 2 mappo saw many 2 mappo was so 2 monkey did n''t 2 monkey does not 2 monkey looked down 2 sound is not 2 sounds are not 2 sounds does not 2 teddy went on 1 _ ask _ 1 _ came _ 1 _ do cocoanuts 1 _ do n''t 1 _ done _ 1 _ eat _ Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 mappo was not so 1 _ ran no hazard 1 boys had no sooner 1 children have no consonants 1 day was not yet 1 janet had no fear 1 man was not very 1 mappo did not very 1 mappo was not very 1 monkey made no comment 1 monkey made no protest 1 monkey was not really 1 monkey was not so 1 monkeys do not generally 1 one has no money 1 sound is not audible 1 sounds are not speech 1 sounds does not much 1 speech is not as 1 teddy were not quite A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 31486 author = Anonymous title = The Monkey''s Frolic: A Humorous Tale, in Verse date = keywords = Pug; illustration summary = And _Puss_ look''d her thanks, and politely cried _Mew_! _Pug_ then shook her paw, and they sat down together, "Miss _Puss_," he exclaim''d, "you''ll be shaved, I presume?" Now _Pug_ could not find either razor or knife, So _Puss_ ran no hazard of losing her life;-_Pug_ found what the terrified _Cat_ thought as bad; With which Barber _Pug_ now proceeded to scrape her. While _Pug_, still determined to give her a scraping, For _Pug_ had contrived, amid _Susan''s_ alarms, To reach the house-top, with Miss _Puss_ in his arms. Now fearing that _Pug_ or Miss _Puss_ might be maim''d, But _Pug_ with loose tiles soon repulsed the assailant. _Pug_ chatter''d and paced to and fro on the roof, And _Puss_ and the _Monkey_ grown fiercer and bolder, "My _Monkey_ and _Cat_ have created alarm; Nursery Ditties: from the Lips of Mrs. Lullaby. By the Author of "Stories of Old Daniel." id = 18626 author = Bailey, Arthur Scott title = The Tale of Major Monkey date = keywords = Crow; Major; Monkey; Mr. summary = "Major Monkey," said the newcomer, knocking off his cap with one hand Major Monkey and old Mr. Crow had a long talk. In reply to Mr. Crow''s questions, Major Monkey explained that he was a introducing everybody to "his old friend, Major Monkey." "He''ll be here soon," he said when people asked him where Major Monkey Major Monkey touched his cap to Mr. Crow. hadn''t been for Peter Mink and Tommy Fox. As soon as Major Monkey showed himself, after throwing the apple at And turning to his friend, the Major, Mr. Crow said: "Which of these Major Monkey opened his hand and gave Mr. Crow a good look at his Now and then old Mr. Crow flew up and tried to talk with Major Monkey. Mr. Crow took good care not to lose sight of Major Monkey. And Major Monkey turned to Mr. Crow and said: id = 43906 author = Bannerman, Helen title = The Story of the Teasing Monkey date = keywords = illustration summary = And next time Jacko pulled the lion''s tail he gave a great tug--the roots broke, and down fell Jacko, into the huge, fierce grim old lion''s The lioness came and looked at Jacko. The lion and lioness were rather worried because Jacko did not get fat, "I am tired of bananas," said Jacko. "Yes," said Jacko, "and I don''t want to be fat for those old lions." So the lion went back and told the little rats _very fiercely_ that he But as the cocoa-nuts fell on the heads of the lion and lioness, and As soon as their heads felt a little better, the lion and lioness took Jacko was very much delighted to get the cocoa-nuts, but he had hard And the lion and lioness peeping in, thought it was all Jacko, and they But Jacko was so round with eating cocoa-nut, and so slippery with id = 13980 author = Barnum, Richard title = Mappo, the Merry Monkey: His Many Adventures date = keywords = Mappo; Monkey; Prince; Tum summary = The name of the little monkey boy was Mappo, and he had two brothers and "I guess that tiger is gone now," said Jacko to Mappo. "You''d better ask mamma," said Choo, one of the little girl monkeys. "We--we thought the tiger was gone," said Mappo, who was trembling "No, we must let Mappo have a good try," said Mrs. Monkey. white meat, Mappo thought of a good trick to play on Bumpo or Jacko. at the tiger, Mappo," said an old grandfather monkey, high in a tree. one was a big striped tiger, and when Mappo saw him, the monkey crouched "What is it?" asked Mappo, wondering how he, a little monkey, could do "Hello!" said Mappo to Tum Tum, as the little monkey sat on the "Now, Prince," said the circus man, "Mappo is going to have a ride on "Well, I don''t like to lose such a good trick monkey," said Mappo''s id = 29254 author = Drummond, Henry title = The Monkey That Would Not Kill date = keywords = Donald; Gum; Tricky; illustration; monkey; shepherd summary = catching the monkey by the tail with the other, he swung poor Tricky a man nor monkey who had ever been hanged on board his ship should ever be Tricky to perch on the top of the pump, tied the rope round his neck, monkey''s neck, and led him forth to the edge of the great sea-cliff. The shepherd rose for the first time since that monkey In the first place this new monkey was very like Tricky, and Another thing that makes me think it is the same monkey, is that Tricky the monkey that--would--not--kill, after searching night and day for a Captain told Donald that the monkey had never been known to behave like one other thing happened that night: Donald gave the monkey its name. When the next station came, however, Donald and the monkey were killed the monkey, for Donald would surely go in search of it; so after id = 21049 author = Garis, Howard Roger title = The Curlytops and Their Pets; Or, Uncle Toby''s Strange Collection date = keywords = Curlytops; Jack; Janet; Martin; Mr.; Mrs.; Teddy; Toby; Uncle summary = Mrs. Martin opened and read the letter as Ted and Janet went back to "This is a letter from your Uncle Toby," said Mrs. Martin, "and there is Teddy and Janet laughed, and Trouble looked at them with wondering eyes. "Probably Uncle Toby is too old a man to bother with pet cats," said Mrs. Martin. Janet, Teddy and Trouble liked to eat, and toward the end of the meal So this time Mrs. Martin called her little boy by his right name. "Yes, Uncle Toby left you a cat, also," said Mrs. Watson. "Only a little," said Mrs. Martin, for she thought if the Curlytops were away?" asked Mrs. Martin, as Ted and Janet went down the street one way "Janet, you come in and stay with Trouble," called Mrs. Martin "I''ll get "You did very well, Curlytops, and Trouble also," said Mrs. Martin, as id = 32334 author = Garis, Howard Roger title = Jacko and Jumpo Kinkytail (The Funny Monkey Boys) date = keywords = Jacko; Jumpo; Kinkytail; Mr.; Susie; Uncle; Wiggily summary = "But it doesn''t much matter," said Jumpo''s papa, "for as long as Jacko But when Jacko and Jumpo got to the little house in the tree, their It was a few days after Jumpo Kinkytail, the little green monkey boy, couldn''t catch Jumpo, and the green parrot went home with the monkey boy "Come on," said Jacko to Jumpo, as the two monkey boys walked side by So when Jacko and Jumpo were walking home together the red monkey asked "You stay here with Jacko and Jumpo," said the monkey boys'' father, "and earn money that way," said Mamma Kinkytail, as Jacko and Jumpo came in "All right," said Jumpo, so Jacko handed the poor little girl the $1.17. asked Jacko Kinkytail of his brother Jumpo, the green monkey, when he One day, when Jacko and Jumpo Kinkytail, the red and green monkey boys, were coming home from school, Jacko said to Jumpo: id = 33421 author = Garner, R. L. (Richard Lynch) title = The Speech of Monkeys date = keywords = CHAPTER; Capuchin; Mickie; Mr.; Nellie; Park; author; cage; great; life; little; man; monkey; sidenote; simian; sound; speech; time; word summary = mark the sound of monkeys as speech, and distinguish them from mere of the sounds of a great number of monkeys, and among others I secured a monkey-house, and for the first time approached a cage containing five man could easily develop, including thought, reason, speech, and the the monkey had a motive in learning the sound, that I shall relate the far as I have observed, under like conditions use the same sound and expressing thought, and to come within the limits of speech, the sounds Sounds which only express emotion are not speech, as Vocal Organs and Sound--Speech in City and Country--Music, Vocal Organs and Sound--Speech in City and Country--Music, Speech--Sounds accompanied by Gestures--Certain Acts follow Speech--Sounds accompanied by Gestures--Certain Acts follow [Sidenote: SOUNDS OF MONKEYS AS SPEECH] the sounds of human speech, would show that they are aware that ideas that the monkey''s sounds were converted into human speech, but the id = 17429 author = Johnston, Annie F. (Annie Fellows) title = The Story of Dago date = keywords = Aunt; Dago; Elsie; Miss; Patricia; Phil; Stuart; little summary = had left at home,--Stuart and Phil and little Elsie. kept their poor old great-aunt Patricia in a woful state of nervous I thought, "and poor old great-aunt Patricia." Matches that day, but he cried next morning when Stuart came down with The day after I was divided between Phil and Stuart, the boys of the One day Phil was moved into Miss Patricia''s room while his own was Phil begged Stuart to bring his little rubber-gun--gumbo-shooter he "Oh, dear," sighed Phil, half crying, "if Aunt Patricia was only like "He always had good sugar-plums in him, though," said little Elsie, "That''s what might happen to Dago any day, sister," Phil said, in a Phil and little Elsie followed her. last stroke, when little Elsie held open the alley-gate and Phil Phil looked at her little bare red hands and tear-stained face, and not understand your Aunt Patricia, or why many of the little things id = 26618 author = Leslie, Madeline title = Minnie''s Pet Monkey date = keywords = Jacko; LESLIE; Lee; Minnie; monkey summary = MINNIE''S PET MONKEY. MINNIE''S PET MONKEY. MINNIE''S PET MONKEY. MINNIE''S PET MONKEY. Mrs. Lee could not endure to see a monkey dressed like a man, as they I don''t think even Minnie loved her pet monkey as well as she did her "I think you will have to take a little stick, Hepsy," said Mrs. Lee, "I hope Jacko will never see any body shave," said Minnie, in a "I don''t see," said Minnie, thoughtfully, "how a monkey could ever think the little fellow by the chain for a walk, Minnie gayly running by his stairs; and when the gentleman said ''good morning,'' the animal took off "Do you think, mamma, I could teach Jacko to do so?" inquired Minnie, "I should think they would have punished him," said Minnie, with great chapter on Minnie''s pet monkey. "Why, mother, I think Kees was a very good animal, indeed," said Minnie, id = 33629 author = Paine, Albert Bigelow title = The Autobiography of a Monkey date = keywords = illustration; jungle summary = Or joined in the jungle song. THE SONG OF THE JUNGLE. _The tribes of the jungle are we--_ The men came among us one day, Enticed foolish monkeys away. But the monkeys crept out of the tree-tops-The birds and the beasts of the forest The birds and the beasts of the forest And I studied the ways of my master Yet often I longed for the jungle-And, dressed in a gaudy new suit, And the last tangled trace of the jungle Till at night I was changed from a monkey On the ladies he took me to call-And I took her out boating next morning, Then, ho, for the skill of the jungle! Yet often I dreamed of the jungle-With Tusky, our elephant king. With Tusky, our elephant king. The ways and the customs of men. For man did not spring from the monkey, But monkey _descended from man!_