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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 6 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 45112 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 82 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Mr. 3 England 2 old 2 William 2 Thomas 2 St. 2 Sir 2 Saxon 2 Robert 2 Richard 2 Man 2 John 2 French 2 English 1 time 1 thousand 1 scandinavian 1 roman 1 race 1 norman 1 little 1 japanese 1 illustration 1 high 1 great 1 german 1 frankish 1 form 1 english 1 dream 1 christian 1 chinese 1 child 1 celtic 1 anglo 1 Zémi 1 Yanrei 1 Worc 1 Wine 1 Wig 1 Washington 1 Ward 1 Wald 1 Vitæ 1 Virginia 1 Vide 1 United 1 Tôtarô 1 Tokkei 1 Teutonic Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2326 name 479 form 370 man 338 time 268 day 245 word 244 family 222 race 222 century 221 year 215 case 177 son 175 place 175 origin 171 p. 171 child 161 surname 149 life 147 woman 143 instance 135 daughter 134 sense 132 way 132 war 131 stem 127 people 121 list 116 ending 106 meaning 105 warrior 104 wife 99 eye 95 line 87 voice 86 world 85 work 85 rule 85 part 84 writer 84 friend 83 one 83 king 82 character 81 thing 80 register 80 history 80 fact 80 blood 78 number 77 something Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 16299 _ 726 O.G. 658 Eng 388 England 375 Normandy 366 A.S. 314 O 298 Norman 262 F. 254 John 248 William 228 Anglo 224 Saxon 189 Kentucky 186 Baptized 180 English 163 Thomas 157 de 153 Mr. 141 ko 121 Vide 118 I. 109 Robert 98 De 96 Richard 92 Henry 89 Puritan 88 London 86 St. 84 Sir 84 Man 83 Peter 82 L.V. 82 Hari 82 France 81 S. 81 James 81 French 78 Buried 77 Elizabeth 74 Virginia 67 Lord 66 God 65 Charles 63 Old 63 Mary 63 Lib 59 Century 57 Teutonic 57 Sussex Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 1682 it 1645 i 882 he 717 we 497 they 392 you 281 me 264 she 253 him 235 them 159 us 105 her 79 himself 62 itself 40 myself 39 themselves 33 one 14 thee 11 ya 11 ourselves 11 ''em 10 herself 6 mine 5 thyself 5 ''s 4 yourself 4 yours 2 oneself 2 iv 1 æs 1 zo 1 yt 1 you,"--this 1 yoi 1 ye 1 yankee"--the 1 theirs 1 tank[6 1 say--"in 1 ours 1 o 1 life?--only 1 iu 1 hô 1 hyl 1 hwelf 1 him,-- 1 hers 1 farewell:-- 1 em Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 7437 be 2128 have 553 find 488 do 438 say 416 take 367 seem 319 come 290 make 270 give 260 see 228 know 215 become 205 go 191 call 183 think 183 bear 144 represent 134 follow 129 suppose 128 refer 118 correspond 116 form 116 derive 113 appear 108 write 108 look 106 die 104 use 102 occur 101 get 99 signify 95 tell 88 turn 87 begin 86 show 86 live 84 speak 83 hold 83 feel 81 suggest 81 hear 81 bring 78 name 76 stand 76 mean 76 change 70 pass 69 identify 66 leave Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1250 not 429 old 389 same 386 so 382 more 373 also 312 only 294 other 279 great 271 now 260 very 258 then 241 even 229 such 208 english 205 many 205 early 202 first 194 well 193 ancient 179 still 174 german 173 probably 164 as 163 most 160 common 158 again 157 perhaps 146 little 145 good 134 long 134 here 130 up 130 thus 129 much 123 famous 121 own 116 never 115 out 113 last 113 high 105 too 104 present 103 certain 98 there 98 scandinavian 97 far 96 however 94 japanese 88 no Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 63 least 29 most 25 good 21 early 17 great 9 high 6 old 6 eld 5 near 5 late 5 large 5 Most 4 bad 3 young 3 strong 3 manif 3 fine 3 common 2 short 2 sharp 2 noble 2 entries:-- 1 wise 1 wide 1 vivid 1 veri 1 upright,"--hon 1 tough 1 topmost 1 solid 1 slow 1 slight 1 simple 1 rude 1 rich 1 rare 1 proud 1 profane 1 poor 1 plain 1 of,"--a 1 odd 1 mere 1 mean 1 luck,--perhaps 1 l 1 innermost 1 heavy 1 harsh 1 fond Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 134 most 8 least 6 well 1 youngest 1 innermost 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 20 _ had _ 7 _ is not 6 _ is _ 5 _ was _ 5 name does not 4 name was not 3 name is not 3 names were not 3 saxon form _ 2 _ forms _ 2 _ is also 2 _ is often 2 _ is properly 2 _ is so 2 _ is still 2 _ thought _ 2 _ was almost 2 _ was popular 2 _ went out 2 _ were not 2 _ were originally 2 forms were still 2 man went away 2 name came in 2 name is also 2 name is common 2 name is now 2 name is probably 2 name is proper 2 name is variously 2 names are not 2 names did not 2 names was not 1 * coming out 1 _ are _ 1 _ are a.s. 1 _ are not 1 _ are probably 1 _ are really 1 _ are respectively 1 _ are words 1 _ are æsthetic 1 _ became popular 1 _ being _ 1 _ being apparently 1 _ being falsely 1 _ being pretty 1 _ bore witness 1 _ came also 1 _ did _ Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ are not æsthetic 1 _ has no meaning 1 _ is not so 1 _ is not usually 1 _ was no doubt 1 _ were no freak 1 _ were not names 1 _ were not unknown 1 day have not quite 1 name ''s not tribulation 1 name is not so 1 name is not uncommon 1 name seems not improbably 1 name was not likely 1 names are not always 1 names did not readily 1 names was not yet 1 names were not enough 1 names were not frequently 1 names were not wholly 1 norman is not wholly A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 39284 author = Bardsley, Charles Wareing Endell title = Curiosities of Puritan Nomenclature date = keywords = April; August; Backchurch; Bible; Charles; Church; Cornhill; December; Elizabeth; England; English; February; God; James; January; John; July; June; London; March; Mary; Mr.; November; October; Puritan; Richard; Robert; September; Sir; St.; Thomas; William summary = the Puritan incumbent, should have baptized his own children by such names of English surnames and baptismal names might be written. the old English names had gone down before the year 1200 had been reached. document containing 588 names, 92 are William, 88 John, 55 Richard, 48 upon as altered forms of old favourite names, and were entered in vestry Ann, in these days of double baptismal names, perpetuates the impression that Marion or Marian was compounded of Mary and Ann. Of familiar occurrence were such names as _Perrin_, from Pierre, Peter; following _surnames_ (originally, of course, christian names) from the became household names, John, Simon, Peter, Bartholomew, Matthew, James, old Scripture names of Bartholomew, Peter, Philip, and Nicholas received a popular feeling for a century was against turning the new Scripture names baptized in England, thirteen are entered in the register as John or id = 37520 author = Ferguson, Robert title = Surnames as a Science date = keywords = A.S.; Anglo; Bald; Bavaria; Bert; Eng; England; English; Foerstemann; Franks; French; Gar; Goth; Hard; Hari; Hund; Kemble; L.V.; Lib; Liber; Man; Mar; Mr.; Mund; Names; Normans; O.G.; O.H.G.; O.N.; Ric; Saxon; Teutonic; Vitæ; Wald; Ward; Wig; Wine; Worc; celtic; christian; form; frankish; german; high; old; roman summary = also common as the endings of Celtic names, _ward_ taking the form of German form as _Sycamore_, the Anglo-Saxon names from which they may be CLUE TO SOME OF THE ANCIENT FORMS REPRESENTED IN ENGLISH NAMES. CLUE TO SOME OF THE ANCIENT FORMS REPRESENTED IN ENGLISH NAMES. Now ancient Teutonic names formed of one single word had commonly, In many cases in Teutonic names we have words thus formed, and also the English names, with the ancient forms corresponding. should, in names of Teutonic origin, exhibit High German forms in The High German forms, then, that appear in English names may be taken Besides the names of Old Frankish, _i.e._ German origin, which have come names of Anglo-Saxon times, the form _ch_ for (as I suppose) _g_, as in in Anglo-Saxon times, nor anything to correspond in Old German names. besides other names in correspondence with ancient forms. id = 34215 author = Hearn, Lafcadio title = Shadowings date = keywords = Benten; Decoration; Dragon; Kichi; Kyôto; Man; Province; San; Seiza; Sémi; Tokkei; Tôtarô; Yanrei; Zémi; child; chinese; dream; great; japanese; little; old; thousand; time summary = sang was an old Japanese song about a famous shrine in the town of the old man went away as he had come; and the young girl followed him. He is a good young man; and later in life he will obtain a much higher THERE was a man named Tawaraya Tôtarô, who lived in the Province of Ômi. Here I may remark that Japanese children usually capture sémi by means word sémi to names of insects which are not cicadæ. the same kind of sémi may be called by different names in different attached to the following examples are nearly all names of old-time A very large number of Japanese poems about sémi describe the noise of BY the Japanese a certain kind of girl is called a still do, that Japanese girls are usually named after flowers, or an old rule for Japanese names,--a curious rule that might help to id = 47627 author = Pickett, Thomas Edward title = The Quest for a Lost Race date = keywords = Century; Chaillu; Colonel; Conqueror; Conquest; County; Duke; England; France; French; Frenchman; General; Henry; John; Kentuckian; Kentucky; Lincoln; Mr.; Normandy; North; Richard; Robert; Saxon; Sir; St.; States; Thomas; United; Vide; Virginia; Washington; William; anglo; english; illustration; norman; race; scandinavian summary = of England and in the authentic annals of the Anglo-Norman races. the Norman to English soil, in time drove him to the great settlements derivation from the Anglo-Norman branch of the great British race. Norman to the English race in England and the United States. of England and the founder of the Anglo-Norman race that swore the the simpler forms of profanity--Anglo-Norman and Early English. When she lost the Norman element in its early Scandinavian form, her scholar, the great English writer--himself of Anglo-Norman blood--found royal Anglo-Norman, "Prince Hal" of England, the English dramatist _Anglo-Saxon Race_,--which in the great Triple Alliance of Norman and Scandinavian stock; the Norman from Normandy, remotely Gothic, is Normans, but broadly speaking, are a great branch of the English race Kentucky derived from English sources and bearing Norman surnames is _Bagot._ A baronial family (Normandy); came to England at the Norman family is readily traceable from Normandy to England, and id = 51210 author = Sheldon, Walter J. title = I, the Unspeakable date = keywords = Apollo; Center; Deacons; Lara; Mars; State summary = Like most important places, the Govpub Office in Center Four was I started to turn away and the cyb said, "Information on tanks is I felt like anything but standing there and looking lonely working here?" Personal talk at a time like this wasn''t approved We came to a turn in the corridor and something happened; I''m not sure I walked out and wanted to turn and smile at Lara, and get into my "_The woman, Lara, attracts you_," said the voice. "Of course," I said again, and went back to washing my hands. looked at me and said, in approved voice and standard phraseology, Activity Control said they couldn''t do a thing until I was registered. "A spy," said Apollo, looking into my open eyes. "I don''t," said the Chief, and got up. It was the first time I had heard his voice.