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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 2 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 10451 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 83 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 moorish 2 Spain 2 King 2 Granada 2 God 1 thy 1 thee 1 spanish 1 love 1 like 1 heart 1 day 1 come 1 christian 1 castilian 1 bring 1 arab 1 Zaida 1 Valencia 1 Twas 1 Toledo 1 Thou 1 Sultan 1 Sidi 1 Sancho 1 Rome 1 Romance 1 Roderic 1 Quixote 1 Queen 1 Princess 1 Pedro 1 Palmerin 1 Oriana 1 Mussulmans 1 Moors 1 Moor 1 Mahomet 1 Lord 1 Lockhart 1 Lisuarte 1 Infantes 1 Guzman 1 Gazul 1 Gaul 1 France 1 Fernando 1 Esplandian 1 Emperor 1 Don Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 477 day 463 man 341 heart 303 love 260 time 253 knight 243 lady 226 hand 219 woman 218 son 210 eye 207 father 197 city 196 place 187 night 179 word 175 daughter 162 romance 160 arm 157 head 156 life 153 house 151 way 150 name 149 country 146 horse 142 wife 141 people 132 one 131 king 127 land 123 story 123 child 118 year 117 friend 115 death 108 thy 107 ballad 102 sword 101 face 98 art 96 spirit 96 castle 96 brother 94 water 94 sea 93 prince 92 adventure 90 tale 90 song Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 421 King 302 thou 246 Amadis 213 Spain 165 Cid 153 God 135 de 134 Moor 115 _ 104 Granada 104 Don 97 Lisuarte 94 Thou 93 Moors 93 Ali 77 Guzman 74 Court 73 Oriana 65 Alfonso 63 Christians 60 Palmerin 60 Mahomet 59 Fernando 57 Zaida 57 Quixote 57 Cervantes 53 Toledo 50 Infantes 50 Emperor 49 Lord 48 Sultan 48 Ahmed 46 Christian 44 Sidi 43 ye 43 Moorish 43 Count 42 Lockhart 42 El 41 o''er 41 heaven 41 el 40 Constantinople 40 Castile 38 Rome 38 Esplandian 37 lord 37 Spanish 37 Roderic 37 Queen Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3113 he 1565 i 1529 it 1370 him 1217 they 767 she 739 you 699 me 668 them 519 we 416 her 252 himself 219 us 185 thee 71 themselves 46 herself 29 myself 28 one 28 mine 27 itself 13 thy 12 yourself 12 thyself 8 ourselves 5 yours 3 ye 2 theirs 2 o 2 his 2 hers 1 ya 1 water-- 1 thou 1 shine-- 1 ours 1 ay Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 5719 be 2354 have 837 say 606 do 567 take 549 come 478 go 471 see 471 give 426 make 366 find 284 tell 266 bring 264 know 201 leave 191 ask 188 hear 184 fall 173 let 162 arrive 160 call 156 bear 155 answer 154 return 151 meet 150 set 150 pass 149 turn 140 seem 134 die 134 cry 133 speak 129 send 126 follow 123 stand 118 think 115 ride 113 lie 110 write 110 rise 108 eat 106 put 106 hold 105 enter 105 begin 105 become 104 love 103 seek 101 appear 100 carry Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1019 not 433 so 386 more 351 now 296 great 291 then 252 out 215 good 213 up 212 well 207 other 200 only 199 first 188 moorish 186 once 182 own 179 away 176 old 172 such 172 many 171 young 170 there 162 most 162 long 156 here 150 spanish 148 little 145 last 144 as 139 much 137 down 135 thus 130 high 122 still 120 back 119 never 112 off 109 however 108 even 107 very 106 too 106 far 106 again 105 soon 98 indeed 94 fair 89 same 88 yet 86 true 83 christian Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 55 good 30 least 27 most 19 great 9 young 9 bad 8 stout 8 late 8 high 8 fair 7 early 6 brave 5 wide 5 low 5 deep 5 bright 4 rich 4 near 4 lofty 4 l 4 fond 4 fine 4 fierce 4 eld 4 bl 3 swift 3 old 3 lovely 3 foremost 3 dear 3 bitter 2 true 2 topmost 2 sweet 2 small 2 slight 2 pure 2 noble 2 hard 2 happy 2 full 2 eat 2 cool 2 choice 2 black 2 Most 1 wish 1 wild 1 white 1 wear Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 135 most 15 well 6 least 1 wishest 1 spurrest 1 passest 1 lookest 1 gavest 1 boastest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 house is misery 3 arm be free 2 amadis was not 2 eyes are jet 2 heart was full 2 heart was sad 2 men did not 1 amadis did not 1 amadis does not 1 amadis gave melicia 1 amadis had already 1 amadis had not 1 amadis had strong 1 amadis took advantage 1 amadis was about 1 amadis was cordial 1 amadis was fearful 1 amadis was now 1 amadis was sorely 1 amadis was still 1 amadis was well 1 arm am sufficient 1 arm is impotent 1 arms are strong 1 arms be free 1 arms called partenopex 1 arms were bright 1 cid is castilian 1 cid is constantly 1 cid is perhaps 1 cid knew nothing 1 cid made reply 1 cid makes war 1 cid saw clearly 1 cid was greatly 1 cid was john 1 cid was old 1 cid was right 1 cid was well 1 city come out 1 city were jealous 1 day bore mustapha 1 days did perion 1 days passed thus 1 days were past 1 eye took in 1 eyes are closed 1 eyes are fine 1 eyes are wet 1 eyes have never Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 cid had no reason 1 city had no king 1 love is not alike 1 word were not too A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 38530 author = Spence, Lewis title = Legends & Romances of Spain date = keywords = Alfonso; Amadis; CarriĆ³n; Castile; Cervantes; Cid; Constantinople; Court; Don; Emperor; Esplandian; Fernando; France; Gaul; God; Granada; Guzman; Infantes; King; Lisuarte; Lockhart; Moors; Oriana; Palmerin; Pedro; Princess; Queen; Quixote; Roderic; Romance; Rome; Sancho; Spain; Toledo; Valencia; castilian; christian; moorish; spanish summary = "Martin Antolinez," said the Cid, "thou art a true man and a good request the King to bestow the hands of the Cid''s daughters upon their and a half years old, the King and Queen, at that time sojourning at Amadis arrived with Gandalin at the Court of King Perion, in Gaul. after Amadis, who was on his way to the Court of King Lisuarte at Amadis, arriving at the Court of King Lisuarte, mingled with its lover, son of King Perion." As they looked upon it Amadis''s dwarf, At the time Amadis had left Britain and had said farewell to Oriana At long last Amadis came to Miraflores and met with Oriana, and great About the same time El Patin, Emperor of Rome, resolved to ask King The combat duly took place between Amadis and the knights of Rome, between Lisuarte and Amadis they resolved to attack the old King''s id = 10085 author = nan title = Moorish Literature Comprising Romantic Ballads, Tales of the Berbers, Stories of the Kabyles, Folk-Lore, and National Traditions date = keywords = Ali; Allah; Christians; Gazul; God; Granada; King; Lord; Mahomet; Moor; Mussulmans; Sidi; Spain; Sultan; Thou; Twas; Zaida; arab; bring; come; day; heart; like; love; moorish; thee; thy summary = Yes, happy, for I knew that thou hadst given me thy love, "Thy words have done me grievous wrong, for, lovely Mooress, couldst thou His life is naught without the thought that thou art happy in thy lot; That thou wert mine and ''twas to me thy heart was given away. Yet hast thou gifts that ladies love; thy bearing bold and bright But now that thou hast turned from me, I come thy face to greet, Thou knowest well that Zaida has loved thee long and true, And be as tender in thy love as thou art brave in arms. "Very well," said he; "wait to-day, and to-morrow thou shalt go with my When day dawned he said to his sister, "Go see if she is in thy father''s "Come now," said the man, and he sent away his son. The next day the young man said to the King: "Make all the inhabitants of