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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 36901 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 87 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 God 1 year 1 work 1 shoemaker 1 life 1 illustration 1 history 1 christian 1 William 1 Wesley 1 Thomas 1 St. 1 Society 1 Sir 1 Samuel 1 Robert 1 Rev. 1 Pounds 1 New 1 Mr. 1 Lord 1 London 1 Lackington 1 John 1 Gifford 1 George 1 English 1 England 1 Drew 1 Dr. 1 D.D. 1 Crispin 1 Cooper 1 Church 1 Carey 1 Bradburn 1 Bloomfield 1 Bible 1 Avdyeitch Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 379 year 369 man 345 time 301 shoemaker 283 life 274 work 191 day 177 book 164 friend 120 age 112 boy 100 name 95 mind 92 poet 90 way 88 child 84 hand 81 cobbler 79 house 79 history 77 woman 76 father 75 school 74 preacher 74 place 74 death 73 part 69 son 69 paper 69 character 68 world 67 story 67 brother 66 trade 66 business 63 people 61 p. 59 writer 59 thought 59 study 59 service 58 word 58 author 55 town 55 mother 54 position 54 country 53 account 52 poem 52 craft Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1036 _ 171 John 125 London 124 Thomas 120 Mr. 92 Carey 83 Cooper 81 God 80 Dr. 76 . 75 St. 71 Sir 70 Rev. 67 William 65 Gifford 65 England 62 Lord 55 Drew 54 Bloomfield 53 New 53 Bradburn 52 Samuel 51 Crispin 50 Society 49 George 48 Lackington 48 Bible 47 Wesley 46 pp 45 Robert 44 D.D. 41 4to 38 Christ 37 Pounds 34 Life 34 J. 34 Church 33 Charles 31 vol 30 Sunday 30 Avdyeitch 29 Wesleyan 29 James 29 English 28 Testament 28 Henry 27 S. 27 H. 26 King 25 Street Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 1901 he 751 it 538 him 505 i 209 they 206 them 162 we 140 himself 131 me 123 you 73 she 42 us 31 her 25 myself 24 themselves 16 one 13 itself 7 thee 6 herself 4 yourself 3 mine 2 himself:-- 1 yours 1 ye 1 this:-- 1 theirs 1 ourselves Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 3459 be 1225 have 293 say 279 do 255 make 203 go 180 take 180 give 160 see 153 come 144 read 142 write 139 find 129 become 124 know 111 live 102 begin 101 speak 96 bear 94 leave 92 work 92 call 87 seem 86 tell 83 publish 82 send 71 pay 70 follow 69 hold 69 die 68 lead 68 bring 67 learn 64 stand 64 receive 64 keep 60 put 59 get 58 set 57 think 57 show 56 pass 56 feel 55 hear 55 appear 53 sit 49 look 48 spend 48 add 46 turn Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 464 not 247 good 217 first 214 more 202 so 176 old 170 very 166 great 149 little 141 up 140 now 138 own 138 most 136 other 130 well 122 much 117 young 113 only 111 such 111 out 109 many 107 poor 106 then 96 never 94 as 92 down 87 long 87 few 81 soon 79 once 79 last 78 again 74 also 69 early 66 religious 66 about 62 even 60 new 56 same 53 often 52 on 52 here 51 ever 50 small 50 large 50 away 49 still 49 literary 49 hard 47 several Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 77 good 26 most 17 great 14 least 13 bad 9 high 5 low 4 late 4 early 3 warm 3 strong 3 gav 3 Most 2 smart 2 simple 2 pure 2 old 2 foremost 2 eld 2 deep 2 cheap 2 bl 1 vile 1 true 1 sweet 1 strange 1 small 1 quick 1 noble 1 near 1 long 1 large 1 l 1 j 1 homely 1 happy 1 flat 1 fit 1 fine 1 extreme 1 easy 1 dr 1 dark 1 cold 1 choice 1 busy 1 bare 1 able Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 112 most 8 well 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 life did not 2 man was not 1 _ are not 1 _ be _ 1 _ give _ 1 _ living _ 1 _ living men 1 _ was not 1 _ write _ 1 _ wrote _ 1 book called fenning 1 book did not 1 book is full 1 book is never 1 books were now 1 boy was convinced 1 boy was not 1 boy was sir 1 boys were out 1 carey had not 1 carey was distressed 1 carey was modest 1 carey was much 1 children were not 1 cobbler came by 1 cobbler was still 1 cobbler was there 1 cooper have often 1 day are closed 1 day did more 1 day is despatched 1 days gone by 1 days were more 1 friends are fain 1 friends had often 1 friends were about 1 friends were poor 1 god did not 1 god gave avdyeitch 1 god was so 1 house was afterward 1 house was amazingly 1 house was great 1 john took pride 1 john was only 1 life became quiet 1 life is not 1 life seemed nearly 1 life was well 1 lives are worth Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ was not already 1 carey had not once 1 children were not thus 1 poet was not yet 1 poets are not very 1 shoemaker having no family 1 time was no amusement 1 time was not yet 1 time were not far A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 23652 author = Anonymous title = The Entertaining History of Jobson & Nell date = keywords = illustration summary = Price 31 cents coloured. JOBSON & NELL. JOBSON & NELL. Liv''d Jobson and Nell Liv''d Jobson and Nell And cobbling of Shoes was his trade And cobbling of Shoes was his trade Tho'' the people where left in the lurch. Nell called Jobson a very great Sinner And poor Nell and he got no Dinner. But the Parson good man To have on a sunday good cheer Both roast Beef and pudding For Jobson''s good Nose When the Parson''s old Cook So in tears ran to tell her old Master. When he found his roast Beef And forgave Jobson keeping the Shoes. price coloured 18 cents, plain 12 cents. The Adventures of Little James and Mary. Peter Prim''s profitable present for good Boys and Girls. And a variety of others, to which will be added new ones, from time The spelling of "where" in "Tho'' the people where left in the lurch." id = 38616 author = Tolstoy, Leo, graf title = Where Love is There God is Also date = keywords = Avdyeitch; God summary = Avdyeitch had always been a good man; but as he grew old, he began to And the little old man said:-And the little old man said:-And the little old man said:-"Christ has taught us how to live for God. You know how to read? "_And he turned to the woman, and said unto Simon, Seest thou this "Come, now, have some more tea," said Avdyeitch; but Stepanuitch made The woman came to the bed, and took the child; and Avdyeitch rose, went "Take this, for Christ''s sake," said Avdyeitch, giving her a But here Avdyeitch saw that an old apple woman had stopped in front of Avdyeitch began to entreat the old woman:-The old woman let him loose; the boy started to run, but Avdyeitch kept "God has commanded us to forgive," said Avdyeitch, "else we, too, may And the old woman even forgot to ask Avdyeitch to pay for the apple. id = 40677 author = Winks, W. E. (William Edward) title = Lives of Illustrious Shoemakers date = keywords = Bible; Bloomfield; Bradburn; Carey; Church; Cooper; Crispin; D.D.; Dr.; Drew; England; English; George; Gifford; God; John; Lackington; London; Lord; Mr.; New; Pounds; Rev.; Robert; Samuel; Sir; Society; St.; Thomas; Wesley; William; christian; history; life; shoemaker; work; year summary = spirit, after a few years'' work at shoemaking, he made off to sea. only twenty-four years of age, a tall thin young man, with little on his Lackington commenced life as a shoemaker, and for some time after he had his apprenticeship were spent in the service of his master''s widow, Mr. Bowden having died when Lackington had served about four years. little knot of shoemakers working together lived a life of intense the day, made the new time a perpetual Sabbath, and the shoemaker''s room Samuel Drew''s life as a shoemaker came to an end with the year 1805. The story of Carey''s life and work in India cannot be followed in course of time, and the shoemaker soon began to take great delight in The useful life of this philanthropist came to an end on New Year''s Day, of age, and divided his time between field-work and shoemaking.