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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 4 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 58958 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 89 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Mrs. 3 Mr. 3 Lord 1 know 1 Yellow 1 William 1 Wilfrid 1 Tom 1 Sir 1 Ruth 1 Prof. 1 Popham 1 Peter 1 Oliver 1 Olive 1 Newbury 1 Nancy 1 Mother 1 Miss 1 Mary 1 Marvel 1 Marion 1 Marcia 1 Lucretia 1 Lester 1 Lannithorne 1 Lady 1 Kathleen 1 Karte 1 Julia 1 James 1 House 1 Hoddon 1 Hobbs 1 Havisham 1 Harmon 1 Hamilton 1 Grey 1 Glenwilliam 1 Gilbert 1 Fauntleroy 1 Errol 1 Enid 1 England 1 Edward 1 Earl 1 Dr. 1 Dorincourt 1 Dir 1 Dick Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 736 mother 430 thing 424 man 385 time 370 hand 359 eye 351 life 313 father 300 woman 292 house 292 day 289 face 285 room 284 way 284 child 254 year 234 boy 227 family 223 girl 213 people 201 one 192 letter 188 moment 187 head 185 something 174 son 174 door 168 word 166 nothing 162 friend 158 night 156 voice 150 place 150 mind 143 chair 141 morning 137 world 136 anything 134 heart 131 side 127 window 127 money 121 hour 119 daughter 112 course 111 work 108 wife 108 matter 107 home 99 week Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1561 _ 709 Coryston 440 Mr. 424 Marcia 406 Nancy 372 Carey 359 Mrs. 337 Lady 272 Lord 255 Arthur 226 Earl 203 Fauntleroy 201 Newbury 200 Gilbert 167 Dr. 159 Julia 156 Peter 144 Mother 128 Betts 122 Beulah 119 Kathleen 115 Cedric 114 House 113 Prof. 112 Glenwilliam 109 Sir 107 Miss 103 Popham 97 Havisham 96 Hobbs 91 Edward 89 Wilfrid 87 William 87 Hamilton 79 Dick 78 Marion 77 Ann 76 Aufl 75 Harmon 74 Olive 72 Cousin 71 Enid 69 Marvel 67 Yellow 64 Clarissa 63 Desire 62 James 58 Mit 58 Lester 58 Bill Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3770 i 3180 it 3123 he 2839 you 2657 she 1195 him 1063 her 893 me 874 they 634 we 593 them 225 us 221 himself 184 herself 90 myself 51 yourself 51 themselves 49 one 48 itself 33 ''em 25 mine 21 hers 15 ''s 13 yours 12 his 10 ourselves 9 ours 9 em 5 yerself 2 ye 2 thyself 1 yourselves 1 you''re 1 you''ll 1 you!--for 1 yer 1 wished_"--she 1 we?--even 1 thy 1 theirs 1 thee 1 so''t 1 paul,--you 1 oneself 1 keepin 1 it?--what 1 it!--you 1 i''m 1 hisself 1 hamilton,--i Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 8914 be 3714 have 1839 do 1478 say 787 go 750 know 705 see 683 make 651 come 633 think 618 look 481 take 379 give 351 tell 332 get 300 seem 257 ask 256 want 240 sit 239 put 228 stand 219 find 205 feel 192 speak 187 turn 187 leave 183 hear 182 live 173 let 172 like 156 talk 153 write 152 keep 151 bring 149 call 146 begin 143 hold 131 die 128 marry 126 cry 125 remember 124 wish 122 try 122 mean 122 love 120 believe 119 rise 119 help 117 grow 116 answer Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2432 not 848 so 591 up 565 little 481 very 437 good 418 then 413 never 397 out 366 only 356 more 351 old 335 now 329 much 321 just 309 young 309 well 289 own 281 other 279 down 275 great 272 long 255 too 238 here 236 always 232 first 229 as 223 back 217 last 208 there 202 still 202 all 199 ever 191 away 189 even 174 again 154 many 153 enough 152 new 150 once 144 quite 143 in 140 such 132 really 129 on 128 off 128 few 127 most 125 perhaps 124 white Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 73 good 62 least 29 most 28 eld 13 dear 12 bad 11 great 8 slight 7 young 7 small 7 near 7 high 7 early 6 old 6 late 5 strong 5 low 5 happy 5 fine 4 lovely 4 deep 4 Most 3 safe 3 rich 3 lively 3 large 3 l 3 j 3 easy 3 big 2 topmost 2 soft 2 simple 2 nice 2 fierce 2 farth 2 common 1 z 1 writhe 1 wild 1 weak 1 washstand 1 ugly 1 tall 1 strict 1 strange 1 strait 1 sharp 1 shady 1 shabby Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 98 most 13 well 10 least 1 youngest 1 easiest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 _ is _ 5 _ are _ 5 _ do n''t 5 _ was _ 4 _ did _ 4 marcia did not 3 _ ai nt 3 _ be _ 3 _ have _ 3 _ think _ 3 _ want _ 3 mother did not 3 mother does n''t 2 _ has _ 2 carey had always 2 children do not 2 coryston is just 2 coryston went on 2 earl did not 2 earl was still 2 eyes looked large 2 eyes were liquid 2 girls were not 2 lord ai n''t 2 marcia knew very 2 marcia was only 2 mother has n''t 2 mother went on 2 nancy had secretly 2 nancy went on 1 _ ai n''t 1 _ am _ 1 _ are free 1 _ be all 1 _ be so 1 _ be true 1 _ did n''t 1 _ do _ 1 _ do nt 1 _ give _ 1 _ having convictions 1 _ is n''t 1 _ knowed _ 1 _ knows _ 1 _ leave _ 1 _ like _ 1 _ made _ 1 _ made up 1 _ make _ 1 _ put _ Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 coryston made no reply 1 arthur made no comment 1 boys were no doubt 1 carey made no remark 1 carey was not certain 1 coryston has not only 1 coryston is not at 1 coryston made no sign 1 coryston took no notice 1 girls were not ready 1 hand was not old 1 house is not far 1 life was no human 1 lord was not satisfied 1 marcia knew no more 1 marcia made no movement 1 mother had no mind 1 mother had not yet 1 mother is not scholarly 1 nancy was not absolutely 1 woman has no right 1 women have no more 1 women have no taste!--not A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 49579 author = Burnett, Frances Hodgson title = Little Lord Fauntleroy [abridged]: Für den Schulgebrauch bearbeitet date = keywords = Castle; Cedric; Dearest; Dick; Dir; Dorincourt; Dr.; Earl; England; Errol; Fauntleroy; Havisham; Hobbs; Karte; Lord; Mr.; Mrs.; Prof. summary = Die günstige Aufnahme, welche diese Ausgabe des _Little Lord_ bei den "I am sorry to have been obliged to leave you so long," she said to Mr. Havisham; "but a poor woman, who is in great trouble, came to see me." "Oh!" Mrs. Errol said, "that was very kind of the Earl; Cedric will be Lord Fauntleroy this morning, the next Earl of Dorincourt will think for As Cedric''s mother had said, he was a very little boy. time would lie in the small, chubby hands little Lord Fauntleroy thrust "Oh!" said Lord Fauntleroy, "perhaps you didn''t know about Dick, and the "She is my mother," said Lord Fauntleroy, in a rather low, quiet little "It''s a very beautiful place, of course," said Fauntleroy, with a little "It looks like a boy''s room," he said at last, catching his breath a "They all think that," said the Earl, looking rather black. id = 33665 author = Comer, Cornelia A. P. (Cornelia Atwood Pratt) title = The Preliminaries, and Other Stories date = keywords = Arnold; Charleroy; Clarissa; Desire; Lannithorne; Lucretia; Marvel; Mary; Mrs.; Oliver; Ruth; know summary = Ollie thought a man ought to marry the girl he loves, and prejudices Yes, I suppose she''d like it," said Ruth little figure in the background of Ruth''s vivid young life; some one The things Ruth said about her mother had prepared him to find that "I don''t _want_ my daughters to marry," said Mrs. Lannithorne. She knows what''s fair," said the young man. Lannithorne what a man wants in the family of the woman he marries." Ollie did not know what he expected the man to be like, but his Lannithorne looked across at the young man long and fixedly. Peter Lannithorne looked at the young man long and thoughtfully again "Mother says it''s a wonderful {62} thought for a young woman that her But I looked into Desire''s eyes, and that thought Marvel Charleroy was twelve years old when her father married again, father''s life and take your mother''s place while she still lived? id = 9507 author = Ward, Humphry, Mrs. title = The Coryston Family A Novel date = keywords = Arthur; Atherstone; Betts; Corry; Coryston; Edward; Enid; Glenwilliam; Grey; Hoddon; James; Lady; Lester; Lord; Marcia; Marion; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Newbury; Sir; Wilfrid; William summary = Marcia Coryston looked down upon the speaker with an air that said, "A "Arthur will probably follow this man," murmured Lady Coryston, returning "My dear," she said, panting a little and grasping Lady Coryston''s wrist, "Do what you like when I''m gone, my dear," said Lady Coryston, quietly. "Two years," said Lady Coryston, "have now passed since your father''s Coryston gave a loud, sudden laugh, and stood looking at his mother from a "Enid doesn''t like Lord Coryston," said Miss Atherstone, slowly. As to the scene which had taken place in the drawing-room of the St. James''s Square house on Coryston''s hurried return home after his father''s "My house is always open to my son," said Lady Coryston, quietly. "If we could but revive the duel!" said Lady Coryston, looking up with eyes "Lady Coryston would never look at the likes of me!" cried Mrs. Betts. id = 10540 author = Wiggin, Kate Douglas Smith title = Mother Carey''s Chickens date = keywords = Admiral; Ann; Beulah; Bill; Carey; Cousin; Cyril; Gilbert; Hamilton; Harmon; House; Julia; Kathleen; Lord; Mother; Mr.; Mrs.; Nancy; Olive; Peter; Popham; Tom; Yellow summary = "There never was anybody like mother!" said Nancy, leaning on the gate, "Oh, Peter, how pretty!" said Mother Carey all in a glow. Nancy was a lovely creature to the eye, and she came by her good looks good whales lie, waiting till Mother Carey shall send for them "to make If Nancy''s idea was good, Mother Carey''s idea matched it! Mother Carey had wished the same thing, but hoped that Nancy had not "People fancy that I make things, my little dear," says Mother Carey to "I don''t know where you get your ideas, Nancy," said her mother, smiling "Nancy!" asked Mrs. Carey, looking away from the letter again, "did you I shall love to have it there," said Mother Carey. "Olive has another lovely gift for the Yellow House," said Mother Carey, Then Kathleen and Gilbert and Julia, Mother Carey and Peter bowed their mother like that," said Mrs. Carey promptly.