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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 3 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 81508 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 82 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 Patience 2 Pablo 2 Oswald 2 Lymington 2 Jacob 2 Humphrey 2 Heatherstone 2 Edward 2 Edith 2 Clara 2 Chaloner 2 Beverley 2 Arnwood 2 Armitage 2 Alice 1 wood 1 stand 1 little 1 illustration 1 Water 1 Smoker 1 Mr. 1 Intendant 1 Forest 1 Burley 1 Brockenhurst 1 Bridge 1 Boldre Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 607 time 563 cottage 520 man 488 day 353 forest 351 king 290 father 271 sister 259 cart 257 house 243 room 239 boy 237 hand 233 thing 231 door 230 gun 229 sir 225 intendant 218 way 210 dog 209 night 208 pony 201 horse 192 morning 191 child 189 tree 176 nothing 174 bed 172 brother 166 party 164 patience 151 property 148 side 145 girl 140 year 140 life 139 letter 138 place 136 one 135 friend 128 people 125 hour 125 army 124 yard 120 money 114 work 112 dinner 110 name 110 mile 110 calf Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2599 Edward 1408 Humphrey 661 Jacob 499 Oswald 476 Pablo 363 Alice 291 Edith 246 Clara 231 _ 229 Intendant 228 Patience 211 Heatherstone 197 Armitage 186 Chaloner 173 Lymington 170 Arnwood 163 Beverley 159 Smoker 129 Master 117 Forest 117 Billy 99 London 93 Mr. 88 Mr 82 Charles 75 Colonel 74 Cromwell 74 Corbould 72 Benjamin 69 God 67 King 57 New 57 Miss 56 Grenville 54 Phoebe 53 Mistress 52 Partridge 49 venison 49 Parliament 48 Massa 46 CHAPTER 46 Agatha 45 morrow 44 Southwold 44 Holdfast 43 Sampson 43 Missy 37 General 36 Judith 36 England Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 5721 i 4126 you 3819 he 3096 it 1945 they 1566 him 1282 we 1065 them 1044 me 547 she 367 us 362 her 201 himself 108 myself 65 themselves 42 yourself 36 herself 32 one 28 ourselves 27 mine 22 yours 14 itself 8 his 6 ours 5 thee 4 theirs 4 ''s 2 yourselves 1 oneself 1 indeed:--they Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 10638 be 4683 have 1984 do 1463 say 1273 go 834 reply 797 take 783 think 762 know 756 make 738 come 665 see 541 find 471 leave 469 tell 391 give 386 get 385 put 307 remain 302 bring 284 look 274 let 239 feel 238 call 236 follow 222 wish 222 return 200 hear 191 set 186 want 176 walk 173 perceive 172 pass 164 fall 163 send 161 arrive 159 appear 148 live 146 suppose 144 keep 140 lie 139 turn 129 speak 129 ask 126 ride 126 kill 121 trust 120 hold 120 believe 117 consider Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2760 not 1072 now 987 then 974 so 707 very 682 more 674 up 640 out 589 well 521 as 471 good 445 soon 442 much 402 little 384 here 353 old 341 other 341 down 324 again 313 away 294 long 287 off 268 over 260 only 256 first 242 many 241 never 240 back 232 young 228 great 227 still 220 there 219 too 216 in 210 own 192 last 175 indeed 161 about 152 home 151 on 148 poor 145 quite 142 ready 141 such 137 yet 135 most 134 few 132 therefore 125 fast 124 just Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 82 good 47 least 22 most 11 great 10 bad 8 dear 6 eld 4 early 3 safe 3 old 2 young 2 wr 2 warm 2 true 2 strong 2 short 2 say 2 near 2 lovely 2 less 2 large 2 high 2 handsome 2 fair 2 bitter 2 Most 1 wild 1 wide 1 stony 1 quaint 1 may 1 lonely Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 113 most 11 well 6 least 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 16 edward went out 11 humphrey set off 10 edward did not 8 edward had not 8 thing is certain 6 humphrey had not 6 humphrey was very 6 humphrey went out 6 pablo set off 4 alice came out 4 edith was very 4 edward did so 4 edward looked round 4 edward made up 4 edward remained silent 4 edward took up 4 edward was much 4 edward was not 4 edward was satisfied 4 edward went in 4 gun went off 4 humphrey was more 4 humphrey was not 4 humphrey was now 4 intendant came up 4 jacob had never 4 jacob set off 4 jacob went out 4 men were so 4 oswald came out 2 alice knows well 2 alice was not 2 alice was soon 2 boys went out 2 boys were up 2 cart is loaded 2 cart was more 2 cart was now 2 cart was soon 2 cart was well 2 cart were soon 2 clara was silent 2 clara went out 2 cottage are less 2 cottage is mine 2 cottage is small 2 days do not 2 days had altogether 2 days have always 2 door was unfastened Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 edward made no reply 2 edith did not quite 2 edward had no gun 2 edward had no idea 2 edward had no objection 2 edward saw no more 2 edward was not conscious 2 father was not present 2 forest was no longer 2 humphrey was not only 2 jacob had no second 2 jacob is not more 2 king had not yet 2 man was not only 2 patience made no reply 2 sisters are no longer 2 time was not ripe 1 men tell no tales 1 pablo is not mr 1 pablo is not mr. 1 time is not yet A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 44909 author = Godfrey, Elizabeth title = The New Forest date = keywords = Boldre; Bridge; Brockenhurst; Burley; Forest; Mr.; Water; illustration; little; stand; wood summary = trees; he thinks of a forest as a wood of large extent, interrupted "lawns", as he calls the lightly wooded slopes, many long, marshy thatched cottage used to stand a little back from the road, where Mr. Pope and his forebears for many generations--one may say for many dividing manor and forest, but the name is old, and wire fencing is Leaving the high moor on the eastern side, a rough forest track borders the Forest, "betwixt the woods and the sea". Fine old oaks stand about a lawn round which the brook beautiful beeches of Vinny Ridge and Burley Old Wood, crosses The spot where the Salisbury road enters the Forest at From Brook, lying in a wooded hollow on the Forest border, the road sanctuary stands, as all the Forest churches do, raised upon a mound, most beautiful of these is Burley Old Wood. id = 21558 author = Marryat, Frederick title = The Children of the New Forest date = keywords = Alice; Armitage; Arnwood; Beverley; Chaloner; Clara; Edith; Edward; Heatherstone; Humphrey; Intendant; Jacob; Lymington; Oswald; Pablo; Patience summary = Humphrey can lead the pony; and Master Edward," continued Jacob, taking Edward made no reply, but Humphrey said, "Well, she has taken plenty of "Now then, Edward and Humphrey," said Jacob, advancing between the "No, they are not now, Jacob," said Humphrey; "as you and Edward claim "Thank God that you are come, Edward," said the old forester, "for I was "Humphrey," said Edward, as soon as Oswald was gone, "I have made up my Humphrey went immediately to put the pony in the cart, when Edward said: "We made a good day''s work, Edward," said Humphrey, as he reckoned up "If you don''t want me any longer, Humphrey," said Edward, "I think I "Good-morning, Humphrey," said Edward, "I am almost ready for you; but "He went away with Edward and Humphrey, I think," said Edith. "Perhaps so, Humphrey," replied Edward; "and yet do you know that, id = 6471 author = Marryat, Frederick title = The Children of the New Forest date = keywords = Alice; Armitage; Arnwood; Beverley; Chaloner; Clara; Edith; Edward; Heatherstone; Humphrey; Jacob; Lymington; Oswald; Pablo; Patience; Smoker summary = Edward made no reply, but Humphrey said, "Well, she has taken plenty of "Now then, Edward and Humphrey," said Jacob, advancing between the Jacob and Edward took their guns, and Humphrey put Billy in the cart "Humphrey," said Edward, as soon as Oswald was gone, "I have made up my Humphrey went immediately to put the pony in the cart, when Edward said, "Humphrey," said Edward, "one thing is clear--as the herd is placed at "We made a good day''s work, Edward," said Humphrey, as he reckoned up "If you don''t want me any longer, Humphrey," said Edward, "I think I "Good-morning, Humphrey," said Edward: "I am almost ready for you; but Humphrey," said Edward; "if so, all the better for poor little Clara. "He went away with Edward and Humphrey I think," said Edith. "I know nothing about these things, Edward," replied Humphrey; "but I