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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 69904 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 87 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Indians 2 illustration 2 New 2 Mexico 2 Arizona 1 spanish 1 indian 1 day 1 boy 1 Xavier 1 Woman 1 Wind 1 White 1 West 1 Water 1 Vic 1 Tom 1 Tiéholtsodi 1 Taos 1 Sun 1 Spain 1 Southwest 1 Sergeant 1 Santa 1 San 1 Rock 1 Raiser 1 People 1 Pecos 1 Paz 1 Palace 1 Painted 1 Nayénezgani 1 Navajos 1 Navajo 1 Navahoes 1 Navaho 1 National 1 Mr. 1 Mountain 1 Moki 1 Mission 1 Mesa 1 Manuel 1 Man 1 Legend 1 Kisáni 1 Juan 1 House 1 Hopi Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 856 man 692 day 548 time 493 people 418 water 388 boy 370 house 367 mountain 332 woman 327 place 321 foot 311 way 297 night 279 side 263 name 237 fire 226 head 223 year 221 mile 219 stone 211 corn 197 hand 195 world 194 one 193 wall 192 rock 192 god 188 camp 186 trail 181 horse 178 child 174 life 173 end 171 morning 171 land 170 brother 164 song 155 nothing 152 east 150 north 149 top 149 part 149 ground 148 word 148 thing 148 rite 147 line 146 tree 144 home 142 log Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 392 Navaho 321 _ 321 Indians 250 Navahoes 193 New 193 Frank 187 San 178 Henry 160 Bah 141 Mexico 137 Navajo 134 Billy 131 Mr. 124 Coyote 111 Santa 100 Nayénezgani 98 Forests 97 Navajos 96 Desert 95 America 89 Arizona 86 Cañon 82 White 80 Grande 80 Fe 78 Vic 77 Mountain 76 Juan 71 West 70 National 68 Indian 66 Hastséyalti 64 God 63 Taos 62 Rio 61 Woman 61 Southwest 61 Father 60 tsi''ni 60 god 56 First 53 Mission 51 Clary 51 Brenda 50 Water 49 Wind 49 Sun 49 People 49 La 49 Colorado Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2760 he 2578 it 2464 they 2327 you 1849 i 1009 we 887 them 885 she 757 him 519 me 383 us 291 her 116 himself 109 themselves 48 yourself 42 one 35 itself 34 myself 27 herself 18 ourselves 11 ''em 9 theirs 8 yours 8 ours 8 mine 7 ''s 5 his 4 ye 4 em 2 a.--they 1 yéi.--there 1 yidisél 1 yell 1 ya 1 whence 1 uv 1 tse`lakaíia 1 ts 1 ni 1 hers 1 basketry.--they Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 9036 be 3058 have 1167 do 1154 say 1014 go 1009 come 851 see 791 make 608 take 472 find 414 tell 400 know 365 call 351 give 340 look 299 think 297 get 284 leave 264 ask 248 hear 221 live 211 stand 208 put 199 begin 194 bring 186 show 179 speak 179 return 176 run 174 use 173 send 165 become 164 lie 164 keep 157 follow 154 carry 153 reach 153 pass 151 enter 149 set 145 fall 144 sit 137 rise 136 turn 136 eat 133 let 133 hold 130 kill 124 seem 122 want Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1812 not 656 up 610 out 533 then 466 other 428 down 419 old 405 here 404 so 400 now 400 great 388 more 384 little 372 only 340 again 326 back 316 long 313 white 311 there 294 many 267 first 263 as 241 high 240 well 239 good 232 very 221 young 217 never 214 away 206 such 206 off 200 much 197 same 195 indian 191 still 189 last 181 own 169 soon 167 few 166 far 160 too 156 black 153 on 151 in 143 all 142 next 142 also 139 once 135 most 131 just Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 49 good 41 most 28 least 19 high 15 great 14 fine 10 near 7 young 7 large 6 bad 5 late 5 eld 4 slight 4 low 4 long 4 Most 3 wild 3 old 3 heavy 3 hard 3 faint 3 easy 2 tall 2 short 2 narrow 2 grand 2 cheap 1 weird 1 weak 1 topmost 1 swift 1 strong 1 steep 1 southw 1 soft 1 shrewd 1 rude 1 rich 1 rare 1 quaint 1 pretty 1 poor 1 loud 1 lively 1 handsome 1 fast 1 farth 1 empty 1 early 1 deep Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 94 most 7 well 3 least 1 near 1 mast 1 hard 1 fast 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 navahoes do not 3 indians did not 3 navaho did not 3 navahoes did not 3 one has yet 2 fire went out 2 houses are practically 2 houses run up 2 indians had not 2 man does not 2 men went out 2 men were busy 2 navahoes are usually 2 navahoes have not 2 one has ever 2 people came up 2 people did not 2 people do not 2 place called depéhahatil 2 water does not 2 women were guilty 1 _ did _ 1 _ get up 1 _ is large 1 _ see _ 1 _ seeing _ 1 _ were sorely 1 boy is probably 1 boy looked puzzled 1 boy ran away 1 boy stood amazed 1 boy took off 1 boy was evidently 1 boy was exceedingly 1 boy was excited 1 boy was likely 1 boys are not 1 boys asked permission 1 boys came home 1 boys come out 1 boys did not 1 boys got up 1 boys put down 1 boys ran eagerly 1 boys showed little 1 boys took leave 1 boys took vic 1 boys went back 1 boys were absent 1 boys were busy Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 boys had no desire 1 foot is not flat 1 god are not yet 1 gods is not easy 1 houses are not regular 1 indians are not poor 1 indians have no goatees 1 indians have not only 1 man is not ashamed 1 man made no reply 1 men had no names 1 navaho had no fear 1 navaho was no longer 1 navahoes are not numerous 1 navahoes did not then 1 navahoes had not yet 1 one does not ordinarily 1 ones were not such 1 people have no need 1 people used not only 1 water does not all 1 woman made no answer 1 world were not so 1 years are not always A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 40277 author = Brandeis, Madeline title = The Little Indian Weaver date = keywords = Bah; Billy; illustration; indian summary = [Illustration: BAH, THE LITTLE INDIAN WEAVER] "It is bad medicine to dream when one is awake, Bah," said Mother. "No," replied the Indian girl, looking up into his face, "Bah make so For days Bah''s chief delight was her new corn ear doll. know, Bah, that Mother sells or trades blankets, and that Father sells "That''s right," said Billy, thinking of the only Indian he ever knew, The Indian girl looked at him for a moment, and Billy saw two small He looked at each hogan for Bah, and asked the Indians he Then Bah''s mother looked over at Billy. Billy was asking many questions of Bah''s mother and he found her a story, all about Bah, her mother and her father, the Big Chief. [Illustration: BAH''S MOTHER WEAVING NAVAJO BLANKET] After greeting the Indians, Billy looked around for Bah. She was "Don''t be afraid, Bah," said Billy. id = 18352 author = Curtis, Charles A. (Charles Albert) title = Captured by the Navajos date = keywords = Arnold; Brenda; Chiquita; Clary; Corporal; Frank; Henry; Indians; Manuel; Mr.; Navajos; Paz; Sergeant; Tom; Vic; boy summary = "I''ll tell you in half a minute, sir," said Frank, and entering the "Yes, sir, she''ll go to the valley," said Frank. appeared to sleep; and while Corporal Frank took my place at a window Blinking my eyes open, I saw the boy corporals with their right arms Cunningham placed Corporal Henry on his pony, Chiquita, and we started he said: "It is awful to think we are going so near the dear old boy Indians were preparing to leave, Corporal Henry came forward and asked "The pony that small boy rides looks like Chiquita," remarked Frank; the boy dismounted and approached me with Henry, who said, in Spanish: "Henry is not the only one who dreads to part with Vic," said Frank. "She need be no care to you, sir," said the elder boy; "Henry and I "Frank," said Henry, just before the boys fell asleep that night, "I camping-place, Tom," said Frank. id = 31646 author = Laut, Agnes C. title = Through Our Unknown Southwest The Wonderland of the United States—Little Known and Unappreciated—The Home of the Cliff Dweller and the Hopi, the Forest Ranger and the Navajo,—The Lure of the Painted Desert date = keywords = Acoma; America; Arizona; Cañon; Desert; Europe; Forests; Grande; Hopi; Indians; Mesa; Mexico; Mission; Moki; National; Navajo; New; Painted; Palace; Pecos; Santa; Southwest; Spain; Taos; West; Xavier; illustration; spanish summary = days amid the houses and dead cities of the Stone Age; _where you can before the Spanish came, the Stone Age had passed and the cliff people Glacier Park; or the Pecos, New Mexico; or the White Mountains, Arizona; or the Indian Pueblo towns of the Southwest; or the White Rock Cañon of experience of all--along White Rock Cañon of the Rio Grande, in Mesa [Illustration: An Indian girl of Isleta, New Mexico, carrying a water men''s houses, centuries before the coming of horses and cattle and sheep the walls of an adobe streetful of houses, little windows looking out stone--splendid weapon if the Navajos had come this way in old days, and white, or Indian, who knows the trails of the vast Reserve, for water is The belt of National Forests west of the Painted Desert and Navajo Land high mountains--a second Grand Cañon, where lived a race of little men id = 60165 author = nan title = Navaho Legends date = keywords = Arizona; Black; Blue; Coyote; Deer; Estsánatlehi; God; Hastséyalti; House; Indians; Juan; Kisáni; Legend; Man; Mexico; Mountain; Navaho; Navahoes; Nayénezgani; New; People; Raiser; Rock; San; Sun; Tiéholtsodi; Water; White; Wind; Woman; day summary = or Blue Body, who was like the present Navaho god Tó''nenili, or Water people: "Come hither, all ye men," he said; "I wish to speak to you, He remained in the Navaho camp nine days, and then he went people came to the Navahoes from an old pueblo named Klógi, which was after they came among the Navahoes, Kinaá''ni, High Stone House People; Then the gods spoke to the Navaho and said: "We have taken The old man placed another skin beside the Navaho, sat on it, the old man entered the lodge, he said: "Go out somewhere to-day. the other lodge, Deer Raiser came in where the Navaho sat and said: beside my path?" said the Navaho, and he passed on his way and went He pointed to a place by his side, and said to the Navaho: These mountains are said to bound the Navaho land on the